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After the tornado of 1973 damaged the previous Temple, which had stood at the corner
of Kings Mills Rd. and Main St., we met once in the Lebanon temple and then used the Grange
hall in Mason. Don't know if they charged us any rent. The hall didn't have a phone,
so we paid to have one installed.
During the summer, we found out that the Church of Christ would like to sell their
building, which had been heavily damaged by the tornado. To my recollection, the suggestion
to buy it came from W.Bro. Boyd Taylor. The sanctuary had been almost completely leveled and
the roof was off most of the west end of the building.
We agreed to buy it for $122,000 after the church had repaired the roof. At the time we
took possession, the area that now has the drop ceiling had nothing but bare rafters over it.
The hall lights were hanging from conduit and had to be turned on by plugging them in. The
present dining area was divided into 4 classrooms, and the lodge room into a fellowship hall
and 5 classrooms.
The purchase was approved at a special meeting of the Temple Association held in the
building. After some discussion, the vote was 79 yes, 2 no. Funding was from insurance on
the old building, donations and loans from members. The Church of Christ held a not for the
balance. Final payment on the loans was made in 1979 after we sold the property in town.
This included 2 houses as well as the lot where the old temple had been. The old building was
razed by the city in exchanged for part of the property, which they used to widen Kings Mills
road and add a turn lane.
For the first couple of years the church rented the two rooms at the east end of the hall
for their office, and at some times rented other rooms for classrooms.
During a winter shutdown of the Ford plant, we put a work party together, put up insulation
under the roof and moved the drop ceiling from the old Temple to the new one. Boyd Taylor and
Jack Quackenbush were 2 of the workers. EA Ken Foltz supervised wiring. Much later we had
bricks put where the door to the sanctuary was, and several other places.
I think that the first body to use the building was DeMolay, probably in Jan. of 1974.
It immediately became apparent that the fellowship hall was too small, so we removed some of
the rooms. Later we removed the rest of them. This was possible because the room had been designed
to be completely open and the walls of these rooms did not support any weight. We had the ceiling
plastered for looks, but you can still tell where the walls were if you look hard. The alter light
was installed for the first configuration and later moved the rest of the rooms were removed. We
moved the rug from the old lodge room and patched it together in the new. We also moved the seats
from there.
At various times we removed the remnants of the old sanctuary from the slab and put concrete
in the holes. The DeMolay boys helped in this and the removal of walls from the lodge room.
Later, we removed part of the rear wall of the lodge room and had a metal stud wall put up.
This created the present tylers room and squared off that end of the room. With the help of the
Fellowcraft club, we were able to put down carpet in the lodge room.
A group of retired Masons, known as the "Over the hill gang" did many things to improve the
building. They were Dick "Hiram" Walker, Carl Sanker, Ed Grimes, and Day Baysore. W.Bro. Walker
was known as Hiram because he was always making drawings of their projects. They moved many
cabinets, etc. from the old to the new temple. They converted the kitchen into the present
Lodge and DeMolay storage room and re-established the kitchen where it is now. They boarded
up the windows of the lodge room and led crews that painted it and twice put up paneling and
insulation there. For several years, Tony Vabic was our master painter.
Later, a lodge work party built risers for the lodge room. They present pews were donated by
W.Bro. Clint Borchers and moved from a church in Carlisle. They were cut apart and put back
together by a large work party under the direction of Dick Walker.
The dining room was established in tow stages by removing the hall walls and adding beams to
support the roof. The second stage was to include removing the wall that forms the coatroom,
but we decided that it was supporting too much weight and were afraid to remove it. The dining
room floor was leveled by pouring concrete where some of the walls had been. It was then coated
with epoxy, which later had to be redone. Recently it was carpeted. It has been painted several
times and paneling added. At some time, the serving window was cut in the wall.
Originally electric resistance heaters heated the whole building, with air conditioning only
in the office. We added air conditioners from the old temple to the lodge room by cutting holes
in the walls. Later we bought heat pumps for the lodge and dining rooms. Tom Walker built a
computer operated remote control system for the heating and cooling system.
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