Mimosa Lodge in Aurora
The other night I visited Mimosa Lodge No 576 in Toronto East District that these days meets in Aurora - and, wow, what an impressive temple: a converted church, complete with paintings adorning the walls; apparently several by the same artist who painted the scrolls in Zeradatha Lodge. This was the annual Installation of the WM and Investiture of his officers, and I, for the first time since being invested, sat in the West during the ceremony, while MWBro Don Campbell was the IM.
The temple was originally constructed in 1877 as a Methodist Episcopal Church and was purchased in 1885 by The Rising Sun Lodge, which has continued to own and occupy the premises since that time. The walls of the Lodge Sanctuary are graced by four magnificent paintings installed in the early 1900's to illustrate the Four Proper Objects of a Mason's daily life - Prayer, Labour, Refreshment, and Sleep.
The first is a mural "Prayer", approximately seven feet square on the "East" wall behind the Master's chair. It was painted in 1906 by the late Brother B.G.Stevenson. The others are framed canvases approximately four feet wide and ten feet tall. They were painted by the late Brother James Thomas Dowling of Uxbridge Ontario.
The temple was originally constructed in 1877 as a Methodist Episcopal Church and was purchased in 1885 by The Rising Sun Lodge, which has continued to own and occupy the premises since that time. The walls of the Lodge Sanctuary are graced by four magnificent paintings installed in the early 1900's to illustrate the Four Proper Objects of a Mason's daily life - Prayer, Labour, Refreshment, and Sleep.
The first is a mural "Prayer", approximately seven feet square on the "East" wall behind the Master's chair. It was painted in 1906 by the late Brother B.G.Stevenson. The others are framed canvases approximately four feet wide and ten feet tall. They were painted by the late Brother James Thomas Dowling of Uxbridge Ontario.
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