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In addition to the local news, WXPR Public Radio also likes to find stories that are outside the general news cycle... Listen below to stories about history, people, culture, art, and the environment in the Northwoods that go a little deeper than a traditional news story allows us to do. Here are all of the series we include in this podcast: Curious North, We Live Up Here, A Northwoods Moment in History, Field Notes, and Wildlife Matters.These features are also available as a podcast by searching "WXPR Local Features" wherever you get your podcasts.

Not so Mysterious: Past and Present Masonic Temples Build Community

There are several Masonic Lodges of Freemasons here in the Northwoods, but the network has always had an air of mystery.

Recently we received a Curious North question asking us to investigate the history of local Masonic Temples, which led us to wonder… what is the role of a Masonic Temple in a community?

Mackenzie Martin headed to the Rhinelander Masonic Temple and the former Wausau Masonic Temple to find out.

Famous Masonic Temples are often an impressive sight to behold, featuring large white columns and stained glass windows. Though smaller than some, the Masonic Temple in Rhinelander has been around since 1930 and fits right in.

I took a tour of the Rhinelander Masonic Temple the other day with Rhinelander Freemasons Tony Jones and Bob Dionne. Dionne is second in command, while Jones is a 6th generation Freemason and currently in charge of the Rhinelander lodge with the official title of Worshipful Master.

The room they were most excited to show me was the lodge room, where ceremonies take place as well as other community events.

“We have music and we have our meetings here,” says Dionne. “It’s beautiful to sit in here and listen to Christmas music coming from the stage.”

Credit Mackenzie Martin / WXPR
The lodge room in the Rhinelander Masonic Temple.

“We can give you the architectural dimensions,” says Jones. “But that doesn’t even come close to explaining what it is.”

While we were there, Jones explained one of the more famous masonic symbols to me: the square and compasses with the letter G.

“The compasses teach us to circumscribe our behavior and keep us in due bounds of all mankind,” he says. “And the ‘G’ represents geometry, but in a bigger sense, it represents God, the Supreme Architect of the Universe.”

An inscription on a door in the Rhinelander Masonic Temple is followed by the square and compasses symbol: FREE MASONRY BUILDS ITS TEMPLES IN THE HEARTS OF MEN AND AMONG NATIONS.

While many of the Freemason’s ancient texts, symbols, and rituals are easy to find out about today, Tony Jones acknowledges that there is still a certain air of mystery about the Freemasons. He blames it mostly on Hollywood. He says that today, the masons are just a group of men who support one another as they try to be better versions of themselves today than they were yesterday.

He makes it very clear to me that the Rhinelander Masonic Temple is not a mysterious place.

“You don’t open up a door,” he says. “And all of a sudden, there’s a half a dozen rolls from the Library of Alexandria.”

As is the case for many small towns, the Masons were instrumental in building Rhinelander in the early days. In 1930, the town of Rhinelander raised $50,000 to build the Masonic Temple, which was a lot of money for a small town going through a depression. They are also the oldest civic group and they laid the cornerstone for the Rhinelander District Library and the Oneida County Courthouse.

Whole rooms upstairs are full of historical portraits of Rhinelander’s early masons.

“It’s a lifetime of learning,” says Jones. “You start seeing some of the street names when you look at the rolls of members here, of what they did… The school board, the telephone company… It’s almost limitless what these men came up here to do... And then when you look at all of these pictures, they came up here by wagon train or on foot or by horse drawn carriage and they built something out of the woods. And that’s where we stand today.”

Stories like this are why some people have thought the Freemasons have been running the world over the years and in a way, you could make the case that they have. Many United States presidents and other powerful men were masons, and Jones admits that when he travels, he has taken advantage of the vast network and been welcomed into many lodges – after proving he’s a mason himself, of course. (He says the way masons identify each other is something he likes to keep secret.)

Today, the Rhinelander Masons are still a men’s only lodge, but otherwise they’re open to new members if they believe in some form of a higher power, as all Freemasons do. Their official roster has 75 members, with about 15 being considered active.

“The three major tenants of Freemasonry are friendship, morality, and brotherly love,” says Jones. “Part of being a Freemason is the ability to give back to your community.”

Giving back to the community is a huge part of what their Masonic Lodge is trying to do now, but it didn’t used to be like that. It all changed about two years ago, prompted by a decision from Wisconsin’s Grand Lodge.

“The Most Worshipful Grand Master of the State of Wisconsin sent out a note, or an edict, out to all the lodges, saying it’s time to become family-friendly again,” says Jones. “A lot of the lodges were kind of shrinking in number and so that wasn’t going out.”

“We got together and said, you know, our organization can go one of two ways,” says Bob Dionne. “We can keep doing what we’re doing and just dry up and blow away, or we can change.”

They decided to bring the Masonic Temple back to the old days of being a community building, when Prom and other events had been held in the basement. They now host community events with partners like the Rhinelander District Library in addition to weddings and other parties now. This September, they're one of four downtown Rhinelander music venues for Project North Festival.

Both of Jones and Dionne now feel like they’re using the building for the purpose it was meant to be used for, even if not everyone agrees.

“There are people who think we should maintain the integrity of what it was,” says Jones. “I like what we’re doing now because people like coming here.”

Jones also says that in a world of online interactions in an area as spread out as the Northwoods, he thinks the message of masonry to create an in-person social network for men especially resonates today.

Meanwhile across the country, many masonic lodges have had to downsize and move out of their temples because there are less masons than there used to be. It’s not all bad, though. In some communities, it’s creating a new kind of community space.

For example, Minocqua Brewing Company in Minocqua used to be a Masonic Temple, and the former Masonic Temple in Wausau was recently sold and in May, it opened as Whitewater Music Hall.

One of the owners, Kelly Ballard, says the history of the building is a big part of the reason she loves it. They barely changed anything when they moved in.

Credit Mackenzie Martin / WXPR
The lodge room in the former Wausau Masonic Temple is now used as a music venue for Wausau's new Whitewater Music Hall.

“The layout is one thing,” she says. “It’s perfect as far as they have their gathering room, plus their ceremonial room serves our purposes of having a tap room and a music space.”

Ballard says Whitewater Music Hall wants to be a stage for everyone in the greater Wausau community, and she’s excited to be in a building that she thinks was overlooked for the last few years. But she also knows it’ll take some time to rebrand themselves.

“Until this first generation dies, this will always be the Masonic Temple,” she says.

She’s hoping a mural on one of the walls next year will help.

In the end, the purpose a Masonic Temple serves in the community depends on the community and the Masonic Lodge. No matter what Masonic Temple you’re in though, there’s likely a lot of history there  – and a few secrets.

The Rhinelander Masonic Temple is located at 23 E Davenport Street in Rhinelander. If you’re interested in taking a tour or becoming a Mason, you can reach out to the Rhinelander Masonic Lodge at 715-493-9171 or rhinelander242@gmail.com.

Whitewater Music Hall (the former Wausau Masonic Temple) is a music venue, taproom, and coffeeshop located at 130 N 1st Ave Street in Wausau. They’re open Tues.-Thurs. 10am-10pm, Fri.-Sat. 10am-12am, and Sun. 10am-8pm. WXPR is a sponsor of many of their live concerts.

Music for this story came from Blue Dot Sessions: Decompression by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue).

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