Windsor 403 in Windsor (Essex)
On this Friday night, RWBro Mark Kapitan and I ventured a few miles down the highway to Canada's southernmost district to visit Windsor Lodge for the Installation of the new WM and Investiture of his Officers for 2020 - and it was very well done. I was surprised - though Mark had seen this before - to see the WM slide gently into the role of IM and conduct most of the ceremony, with the exception of a few pieces.
The temple, built in 1921, is truly impressive. It was designed by James Carlisle Pennington in a Neo-Classical Revival style and was given heritage designation by the City of Windsor in 1994. In addition to many pieces of memorabilia upon numerous shelving units, and various pictures and portraits, and Honour Rolls, adorning the historic walls, it features a ballroom on the ground floor and two great lodge rooms (one extremely large, which we enjoyed throughout the ceremony from the East, and the other, called The Red Room, was only slightly smaller - but definitely provides the "wow" factor to all who see it for the first time) on the second double-storeyed floor, and both have comfortable outer seating areas, as well as a banquet room on the top floor.
The temple, built in 1921, is truly impressive. It was designed by James Carlisle Pennington in a Neo-Classical Revival style and was given heritage designation by the City of Windsor in 1994. In addition to many pieces of memorabilia upon numerous shelving units, and various pictures and portraits, and Honour Rolls, adorning the historic walls, it features a ballroom on the ground floor and two great lodge rooms (one extremely large, which we enjoyed throughout the ceremony from the East, and the other, called The Red Room, was only slightly smaller - but definitely provides the "wow" factor to all who see it for the first time) on the second double-storeyed floor, and both have comfortable outer seating areas, as well as a banquet room on the top floor.
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