from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York
On April 18, 1826, the Masonic Hall Association announced in the New-York Evening Post its intention "to commence building a Masonic Hall, for the accommodation of all the lodges and other masonic bodies in this city, in the ensuing month." The article offered "subscriptions to the stock of said association" for $10 each--about $330 in 2026 terms.
The cornerstone was laid on June 24, 1826. The Evening Post remarked that New Yorkers had witnessed, "for the first time, we believe, in twenty years, the novel and interesting spectacle of a Masonic Procession." The article mentioned that inscribed on the stone, along with names of the trustees and builders, was, "Brother Hugh Reinagle, Architect." The New York Times added, "Many thousands of our citizens were present to witness the ceremony."
The $10 stock certificates depicted Reinagle's rendering. from the collection of the New York Masonic Library.
Reinagle was not an architect, but a well-known landscape painter. Nonetheless, his Masonic Hall was one of the first Gothic Revival structures in America. The New York Times would recall in 1856, "At the time of its erection, it was looked upon as a prodigy of American architecture."
Sitting on Broadway between Duane and Worth Streets, the building was completed in 1827 at a cost of $50,000, or about $1.7 million today. It was faced in "eastern gray granite," according to The New York Times. Two triple Gothic-arched arcades flanked the main entrance, which was ornamented with Gothic crockets. A row of stone quatrefoils introduced the second floor, which was dominated by a central arched window 22 feet high and 10 feet wide. The New York Times described it as being, "divided into small diamond-shaped window panes in leaden frames." The third floor sat between an intermediate cornice and slightly projecting band course. A rose window distinguished the fourth floor and the crenelated roofline sprouted crocketed pinnacles.
Geo. P. Hall & Son depicted the residential neighborhood around Masonic Hall in 1830. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.
Historian Rufus Rockwell Wilson would recall in his 1903 New York: Old & New, "A costly Gothic structure, its first floor was given up to a single spacious apartment, intended for public meetings, concerts, and balls, while its third story was arranged for the meetings of the fraternity from which it borrowed its name." Visitors entered a long hall that extended through the length of the building. The Grand Saloon--95 feet long, 20 feet high and 47 feet wide--on the second floor was described by The New York Times as "the most splendid apartment of the kind in the United States." According to the newspaper, Reinagle had based its design on the Chapel of Henry VII in Westminster Abbey, saying:
The ceiling was beautifully ornamented, and fancifully divided into light arches with numerous decorations...Open-work columns supported arches which projected from the side walls, between which were false windows wreathed with flowers cut in stone, and carved corbels, and other architectural adornments.
There were historic-themed spaces. The New-York Tribune (which described the Grand Saloon as a "splendid memorial of feudal age, and venerated relic of the early arts,") said that the Great Doric Hall was "equally distinguished for its simplicity, its beauty, and commanding size." Another of the semi-public spaces, according to the article, was the Reading-Room Library.
New Yorkers had an opportunity to see selected spaces on November 30, 1827. An announcement in the New-York Evening Post said:
The public is informed that the Gothic Saloon in that splendid edifice, the Masonic Hall, will be opened for inspection on Wednesday...at which time the whole of the decorations, Grand Lodge furniture, hangings, &c., used at the dedication, can be seen. The Chapter Lodge and Banqueting rooms can be viewed at the same time.
Tickets to tour the three areas cost 25 cents, or about $8 today.
Certain meeting rooms were available for rent. On October 30, 1828, for instance, the Republican Electors of the Sixth Ward held a meeting for promoting the nomination of "the election of General Andrew Jackson" for President. The following year, a meeting of the Friends of the American System backed Henry Clay for the U.S. Senate here.
The Grand Saloon was the scene of the Scottish themed Thistle Ball on March 18, 1829. The New-York Evening Post reported, "Two Bag Pipers, and a number of Gentlemen in Highland Costume, will promenade the room before the commencement of the Ball." This was a benefit event for John Graham, "as a mark of respect for his genius, the emanations of which have so frequently enlivened of public festivals; and also, an alleviation of his affliction, he being entire deprived of sight."
Later that year, in October, a less expected function took place. The New-York Evening Post reported that a boa constrictor was on exhibition. "Although but about five years of age, it already measures some seventeen or eighteen feet in length," said the article. Another snake, an anaconda, had been removed from the exhibition because, "it is now torpid from the process which it is undergoing of changing its skin." The article proposed, however, "When the shedding shall be completed, an opportunity will probably be afford to the public of seeing this animal destroy and swallow its quarterly meal."
In 1827, the body of anti-Mason William Morgan washed up on the shore of Lake Ontario. Shortly after, David Cade Miller published a book that strongly suggested that he had been murdered by Masons. The book eventually affected Masonic Hall. Rufus Rockwell Wilson recalled in 1903, "But following the blow given to Masonry by the disappearance of William Morgan, its name was changed to Gothic Hall."
Gothic Hall continued to be the venue of political rallies, temperance meetings, and exhibitions. On July 26, 1841, for instance, the New-York Tribune reported on the "grand opening fete" of the temperance movement. Among the activities, said the article was "an elegant supper, upon Temperance principles, served up in the Doric Hall with the same splendor and magnificent that was displayed in London at the Great Temperance Festival at the Coloseum [sic]."
On November 29, 1854, an advertisement in the New-York Tribune read: "On Friday, Dec. 1., the marvelous Hybrid, or Bear-Woman, will be exhibited--pronounced by naturalists as a mysterious link combining the Human Species with the Brute Creation."
At the time of the Bear-Woman's appearance here, the end of the magnificent structure was near. On May 26, 1856, The New York Times reported, "They are tearing down Gothic Hall, in Broadway." After reminiscing about the building's history and mentioning that it had held the "largest bowling alley in the world," the article said, "The workmen are busily engaged in tearing down the walls of the edifice, and in a few days nothing will remain on the spot but dust and ruins."
Today the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building sits on the site.





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