Masonic and Odd Fellows Hall - Austin, NV.
Posted by: Volcanoguy
N 39° 29.559 W 117° 04.239
11S E 493924 N 4371451
The Austin Masonic and Odd Fellows Hall has served organizations since 1868.
Waymark Code: WMVETG
Location: Nevada, United States
Date Posted: 04/09/2017
Views: 2
The Austin Masonic and Odd Fellows Hall was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 14, 2003. The following information comes from National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (
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The I.O.O.F. Lodge No. 9 was formed in January 1864 in Austin, NV. In September 1867 a Masonic and Odd Fellows' Hall Association was formed to sell stock for the construction of the hall, which would have store space for rent on the ground level and a meeting hall above. The building was completed in 1868. The southwest-facing two-story building is constructed of brick and has an asphalt-roll front-gable roof with ventilators, a storefront with French doors under a permanent awning, and a rear shed wing. The second-floor lodge room, dressing room, and vestibule have grained woodwork. To the rear, attached to the second story of the main building by a bridge-like deck, is a two-level brick outbuilding that formerly contained a boiler and possibly a carbide plant. This building is built into a steep rocky bank that rises to Court Street. The two-story brick building has notable original or early features such as a patented cable-supported dance floor, early lodge furniture, grained dressing room closets, a ground-floor store with a cloth ceiling, and evidence of a patented gas light ventilation system and iron storefront security doors. In addition to the important role the building played in Austin's social life, it also contained a dance hall and, in 1871, a roller-skating rink.