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{{infobox historic site|title=Iowa Masonic Library and Museum | {{infobox historic site|title=Iowa Masonic Library and Museum | ||
|image =Grand Lodge of Iowa in Cedar Rapids IA |
|image =Grand Lodge of Iowa in Cedar Rapids IA pic1a.JPG| image_size =260px | ||
| caption =Building on March 28, 2011 | | caption =Building on March 28, 2011 | ||
|location=813 First Ave. SE, ] | |location=813 First Ave. SE, ] | ||
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| built =1955 | | built =1955 | ||
}} | }} | ||
The |
The '''Iowa Masonic Library and Museum''', located at 813 First Ave. SE, in ], ], is "reputed to be the largest in the world, and is at least one of the top five, with over 100,000 volumes. Both Masonic and general books are included in the collections and the library is open to anyone, whether Masons or not."<ref name=grand/><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.iowabeautiful.com/east-central-iowa-tourism/418-iowa-masonic-library-museum-cedar-rapids-iowa.html | title=Iowa Masonic Library and Museum – Cedar Rapids, Iowa | accessdate=March 28, 2011 | publisher=}}</ref> | ||
==Library== | |||
] | |||
According to the Grand Lodge of Iowa, "The Iowa Masonic Library is reputed to be the largest in the world, and is at least one of the top five, with over 100,000 volumes. Both Masonic and general books are included in the collections and the library is open to anyone, whether Masons or not."<ref name=grand/><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.iowabeautiful.com/east-central-iowa-tourism/418-iowa-masonic-library-museum-cedar-rapids-iowa.html | title=Iowa Masonic Library and Museum – Cedar Rapids, Iowa | accessdate=March 28, 2011 | publisher=}}</ref> | |||
It was the location in 2008 of the Masonic Library and Museum Association (MLMA) annual meeting, 80 years after a similar meeting in Cedar Rapids at the original Masonic Library.<ref name=>{{cite web|url=http://nationalheritagemuseum.typepad.com/library_and_archives/iowa-masonic-library/ |date=September 7, 2010 |title=People Who Love Masonic Libraries & Museums: Cedar Rapids in 1928 & 2008 |author=Jeff Croteau|publisher=] (founded and supported by the Scottish Rite Freemasons in the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States)}}</ref> | It was the location in 2008 of the Masonic Library and Museum Association (MLMA) annual meeting, 80 years after a similar meeting in Cedar Rapids at the original Masonic Library.<ref name=>{{cite web|url=http://nationalheritagemuseum.typepad.com/library_and_archives/iowa-masonic-library/ |date=September 7, 2010 |title=People Who Love Masonic Libraries & Museums: Cedar Rapids in 1928 & 2008 |author=Jeff Croteau|publisher=] (founded and supported by the Scottish Rite Freemasons in the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States)}}</ref> | ||
The extensiveness and public access of the Masonic library is valuable |
The extensiveness and public access of the Masonic library is valuable. For example, Professor David Hackett of the University of Florida notes that "a fairly large...public collection of Prince Hall materials can be found at the Iowa Masonic Library in Cedar Rapids, Iowa."<ref name=hackett>{{cite web|title=The Prince Hall Masons and the African American Church: The labors of Grand Master and Bishop James Walker Hood, 1831-1918|author=Hackett, David G.|publisher=Church History |date=Dec 2000 |pages=770-802}}</ref> Likewise, Stephen Kantrowitz of the University of Wisconsin-Madison historian notes "Substantial collections of published black Masonic proceedings (which appear in significant numbers only from the 1870s on), pamphlets, and other publications are available at Masonic libraries, including the ], the ] (New York, N.Y.), and the Iowa Masonic Library (Cedar Falls)."<ref name=Kantrowitz>{{cite web|title="Intended for the Better Government of Man": The Political History of African American Freemasonry in the Era of Emancipation |author=Kantrowitz, Stephen |publisher=The Journal of American History|date=March 2010 pages=1001-1026}}</ref> | ||
==Museum== | ==Museum== | ||
The Library includes three museum collections and is open to the public. The museum collections are extensive and include a Masonic collection on the first floor and a Non-Masonic collection on the 2nd floor, consisting of thousands of items. Also there is the Charles H. Swab Memorial collection, donated by deed in 1958. | |||
One of the more interesting artifacts is a Civil War flag, which served as standard for the Iowa regiment in the ], where 97 Iowans were casualties.<ref name=flag>{{cite web|url=http://www.gl-iowa.org/Flag.html |title=Civil War Flag |publisher=Grand Lodge of Iowa, AF&FM}}</ref><ref name=flaghistory>{{cite web|url=http://www.gl-iowa.org/CivilWarFlag-Bill%20Kreuger.html |author=William R. Kreuger, Assistant Librarian|title=Civil War Flag History |date=June 4, 2005}}</ref> | One of the more interesting artifacts is a Civil War flag, which served as standard for the Iowa regiment in the ], where 97 Iowans were casualties.<ref name=flag>{{cite web|url=http://www.gl-iowa.org/Flag.html |title=Civil War Flag |publisher=Grand Lodge of Iowa, AF&FM}}</ref><ref name=flaghistory>{{cite web|url=http://www.gl-iowa.org/CivilWarFlag-Bill%20Kreuger.html |author=William R. Kreuger, Assistant Librarian|title=Civil War Flag History |date=June 4, 2005}}</ref> | ||
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Theodore S. Parvin was "far and away the state's most persistent library advocate for more than fifty years. Parvin's interest in Iowa libraries dated back to the late 1830s, when he was employed as private secretary to Iowa territorial governor ]. He was perhaps the key figure in obtaining congressional funding for a territorial library. Over the succeeding decades, he served variously as territorial librarian, the first state librarian, librarian at the state university, and, most importantly, from 1870 on as the founder of and librarian for the Masonic Library in Cedar Rapids....In addition to his formal positions, Parvin sought every opportunity to develop Iowa libraries."<ref name=goldstein>{{cite web|author=Goldstein, Daniel |date=Summer 2003|journal=Libraries & the Cultural Record |title=The Spirit of an Age: Iowa Public Libraries and Professional Librarians as Solutions to Society's Problems, 1890-1940}}</ref> | Theodore S. Parvin was "far and away the state's most persistent library advocate for more than fifty years. Parvin's interest in Iowa libraries dated back to the late 1830s, when he was employed as private secretary to Iowa territorial governor ]. He was perhaps the key figure in obtaining congressional funding for a territorial library. Over the succeeding decades, he served variously as territorial librarian, the first state librarian, librarian at the state university, and, most importantly, from 1870 on as the founder of and librarian for the Masonic Library in Cedar Rapids....In addition to his formal positions, Parvin sought every opportunity to develop Iowa libraries."<ref name=goldstein>{{cite web|author=Goldstein, Daniel |date=Summer 2003|journal=Libraries & the Cultural Record |title=The Spirit of an Age: Iowa Public Libraries and Professional Librarians as Solutions to Society's Problems, 1890-1940}}</ref> | ||
==Related buildings== | |||
Another Cedar Rapids building, the ] at 210 E. 6th Street, formerly the Scottish Rite Temple, was celebrated by the Grand Lodge of Iowa at a 100th anniversary event in 2010. As a functioning current meeting building this one is not open to the public except on rare events.<ref name=news100>{{cite news|url= |title=A peek inside the Lodge|author=Molly Rossiter |publisher=The Gazette (Cedar Rapids)|date=September 25, 2010}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*], a similar nearby cultural institution | *], a similar nearby cultural institution | ||
*] | |||
*], Freemasons' Hall, London | *], Freemasons' Hall, London | ||
Revision as of 16:57, 29 March 2011
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Iowa Masonic Library and Museum | |
---|---|
Building on March 28, 2011 | |
Location | 813 First Ave. SE, Cedar Rapids, Iowa |
Built | 1955 |
Location of Iowa Masonic Library and Museum in Iowa |
The Iowa Masonic Library and Museum, located at 813 First Ave. SE, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA, is "reputed to be the largest in the world, and is at least one of the top five, with over 100,000 volumes. Both Masonic and general books are included in the collections and the library is open to anyone, whether Masons or not."
It was the location in 2008 of the Masonic Library and Museum Association (MLMA) annual meeting, 80 years after a similar meeting in Cedar Rapids at the original Masonic Library.
The extensiveness and public access of the Masonic library is valuable. For example, Professor David Hackett of the University of Florida notes that "a fairly large...public collection of Prince Hall materials can be found at the Iowa Masonic Library in Cedar Rapids, Iowa." Likewise, Stephen Kantrowitz of the University of Wisconsin-Madison historian notes "Substantial collections of published black Masonic proceedings (which appear in significant numbers only from the 1870s on), pamphlets, and other publications are available at Masonic libraries, including the National Heritage Museum (Lexington, Mass.), the Livingston Library (New York, N.Y.), and the Iowa Masonic Library (Cedar Falls)."
Museum
The Library includes three museum collections and is open to the public. The museum collections are extensive and include a Masonic collection on the first floor and a Non-Masonic collection on the 2nd floor, consisting of thousands of items. Also there is the Charles H. Swab Memorial collection, donated by deed in 1958.
One of the more interesting artifacts is a Civil War flag, which served as standard for the Iowa regiment in the Battle of Champion Hill, where 97 Iowans were casualties.
In 2008, the Masonic Library became the temporary location of the African American Museum of Iowa, whose building at 55 12th Ave., SE, was flooded in the Iowa flood of 2008.
Building
The building was built in 1955. It cost over a million dollars: "The new building cost a little over $1,000,000. it is constructed of Vermont Marble, with grey marble from Carthage, Missouri, lining the interior halls. Metal work in the windows, doors and stair rails is of bronze. The main portion of the building is over 245 feet long and 50 feet wide, while the library wing at the west end is 113 feet deep."
The front facade includes an inscription: "Behold the Lord upon a wall made by a plumbline, with a plumbline in his hand."
The history of the fundraising and planning for the building is extensive.
It is a contributing building in the Grant Wood Cultural District, certified in 2010 by the Iowa State Historical Society.
1884 Masonic Library
The 1955 building replaced an 1884 building which was notable as the only Masonic library in its own building. T.S. Parvin, who was a pioneer and served as secretary to the territorial governor of Iowa, "founded and built the first Iowa Masonic Library, occupying the only Masonic library building in the world."
Theodore S. Parvin was "far and away the state's most persistent library advocate for more than fifty years. Parvin's interest in Iowa libraries dated back to the late 1830s, when he was employed as private secretary to Iowa territorial governor Robert Lucas. He was perhaps the key figure in obtaining congressional funding for a territorial library. Over the succeeding decades, he served variously as territorial librarian, the first state librarian, librarian at the state university, and, most importantly, from 1870 on as the founder of and librarian for the Masonic Library in Cedar Rapids....In addition to his formal positions, Parvin sought every opportunity to develop Iowa libraries."
See also
- National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, a similar nearby cultural institution
- The Library and Museum of Freemasonry, Freemasons' Hall, London
References
- ^ "Welcome to the Iowa Masonic Library, Museum and Administration Building". Grand Lodge of Iowa, AF&AM.
- "Iowa Masonic Library and Museum – Cedar Rapids, Iowa". Iowa Tourism. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
{{cite web}}
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- Jeff Croteau (September 7, 2010). "People Who Love Masonic Libraries & Museums: Cedar Rapids in 1928 & 2008". National Heritage Museum (founded and supported by the Scottish Rite Freemasons in the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States).
- Hackett, David G. (Dec 2000). "The Prince Hall Masons and the African American Church: The labors of Grand Master and Bishop James Walker Hood, 1831-1918". Church History. pp. 770–802.
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(help) - Kantrowitz, Stephen (March 2010 pages=1001-1026). ""Intended for the Better Government of Man": The Political History of African American Freemasonry in the Era of Emancipation". The Journal of American History.
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(help) - "Civil War Flag". Grand Lodge of Iowa, AF&FM.
- William R. Kreuger, Assistant Librarian (June 4, 2005). "Civil War Flag History".
- Erika Binegar (September 14, 2008). "FRESH START: Making plans for temporary exhibits, permanent changes". The Gazette (Cedar Rapids, Iowa).
- ^ "The present Building: Library, Museums, and Grand Lodge Offices". Grand Lodge of Iowa, AF&AM.
- It's in the photo, if you zoom in.
- "A Brief History of the Iowa Masonic Library, Museum and Administration Building". Grand Lodge of Iowa, AF&AM.
- Dave Dewitte (June 12, 2010). "Historical Society certifies C.R. cultural district". The Gazette (Cedar Rapids, IA).
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(help) - "Masonic Secretary Parvin Dead". New York Times. June 28, 1901.
- Goldstein, Daniel (Summer 2003). "The Spirit of an Age: Iowa Public Libraries and Professional Librarians as Solutions to Society's Problems, 1890-1940". Libraries & the Cultural Record.
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