A History of the University District Masonic Building

Bro. Adam S. Alsobrook, AIA, member of University Lodge No. 141, F. & A. M. in Seattle, Washington, just completed a research project on the history of the University District Masonic Building, which was constructed in 1909. The paper also explores the early history of the University District and the founding of University Lodge No. 141, Free and Accepted Masons.

The paper also highlights the work of architects such as Bro. Francis W. Grant and Bro. Austin Grant of Grant (no relation), Copeland and Chervenak, Architects.

Come explore 111 years of Masonic history in Seattle below:

An Outline Biography of the Life and Professional Career of Ulysses Grant Fay, Architect

This document is an overview of the life and career of the architect Ulysses Grant Fay, who was born in Rochester, New York in 1865 and moved to Seattle in 1906, where he died in 1918. Relatively little was known about Fay until my research on the design and construction of the Masonic Building at the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. This document is a compilation of information on Fay that I found in vital statistics records, censuses, newspapers, trade publications, periodicals, directories, and other sources. It is intended as a study guide and reference work for others interested in the life of this relatively obscure figure in the architectural history of the Pacific Northwest.     

Early Masonic Meeting Places in Seattle: 1860-1915

Bro. Adam S. Alsobrook, AIA, member of University Lodge No. 141, F. & A. M. in Seattle, Washington, just completed a research report entitled: "Early Masonic Meeting Places in Seattle: 1860-1915." This paper explores buildings in Seattle that were constructed specifically for Masonic Lodges, and also sheds light on existing buildings that were adapted for Masonic uses. Many of these early Masonic buildings were lost to the wrecking ball long ago, and only a handful of these buildings survive to this day.

This report is intended to serve as a high-level overview of these buildings. Some of these buildings will be the subject of forthcoming research papers over the coming months.

A Forgotten Building by a Forgotten Architect at Seattle's Forgotten World's Fair: The Masonic Building at the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition

Bro. Adam S. Alsobrook, AIA, member of University Lodge No. 141, F. & A. M. in Seattle, Washington, just completed a third research paper entitled: "A Forgotten Building by a Forgotten Architect at Seattle's Forgotten World's Fair: The Masonic Building at the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition." This paper explores the planning, development, design, and construction of the Masonic Building at the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Seattle. It also delves into the adaptive reuse of the building after the conclusion of the exposition and its demolition in 1922. The paper also presents additional biographical information about the architect Ulysses Grant Fay that was discovered in the course of Bro. Alsobrook's research into the Masonic Building.

Come explore this long-lost building and discover the role that it played during the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, which has become known as Seattle’s Forgotten World’s Fair.