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Modeled on a Greek-style temple, the building contains no metal girders—just stone, as the ancients would have constructed it. The massive limestone facade is ringed with 33 Ionic columns. The number 33 proliferates in Masonic ritual, but the group's historians say they don't know what it symbolized originally. The dark green marble floors of the atrium lead to a grand staircase and a bust of Scottish Rite leader Albert Pike, a former Confederate general who spent 32 years developing Masonic rituals. Pike remains a controversial figure, with detractors alleging that he was a member of the Ku Klux Klan and a Satanist. In 1944 the Masons, by an act of Congress, gained permission to dig up Pike's remains from a local cemetery and bury them in the temple.
Among the artifacts on display is a Masonic membership certificate signed by Paul Revere. The silversmith reportedly recruited some brethren for the Boston Tea Party, in 1773. A large painting of George Washington laying the cornerstone for the Capitol and wearing a Masonic apron hangs in the banquet hall. Scores of portraits line a curving mahogany corridor in a sort of I-didn't-know-he-was-a-Mason gallery: Sam Ervin, John Glenn, Harry Truman, Arnold Palmer, John Wayne and Will Rogers among them. On the first floor is the reconstructed office of FBI director and Mason J. Edgar Hoover.
With its roster of power brokers, Masons have long been accused of political chicanery and undue influence, says Lynn Dumenil, history professor at Occidental College and author of Freemasonry and American Culture, 1880-1930. "Today, it's all pomp and circumstance. There are no deep dark secrets in the Scottish Rite building."
Yet visitors to the Washington temple pepper tour guides with skeptical questions. Were Masons involved in the Salem witch trials? Is there a secret tunnel connecting the building to the White House? During one recent tour, a guide pressed on a smudged spot on a stone wall just outside the sumptuous Temple Room. The wall gave way, revealing a spiral stairway that snaked up into darkness. A few visitors cautiously stepped forward. Surely, this is a secret passageway to some treasure! Indeed, the stairs lead to the loft for the great pipe organ.
David A. Taylor is a freelance writer and author of Ginseng, the Divine Root.


Comments
I want to know why sphinxes were chose to guard temples. I don't have an e-mail so can you just post it on your site?
Posted by Leah on January 19,2008 | 04:10PM
The Masonic Lodge and Freemasonry, these are unrecognizable leftovers of guilds and trade unions of stonecutters, banker masons, sawyers, fixer masons, carvers, quarrymen all one way or another associated with and skilled in the craft of stonemasonry. It was mainly a cartel of stone builders (as opposed to say lumberjacks, woodcutters and carpenters) which became a sort of cabal. To demonstrate and show off their craftsmanship stonemasons, apart form fashioning homes and public edifices, created all sort of fanciful sculptures, secret passageways, monuments which ordinary folks took for some kind of mysticism with hidden spiritual meanings. Wealthy stonemasons became elitists and started price-fixing in secret and the rest is history.
Posted by ABDELKADER EL HAMDAOUI on October 16,2009 | 07:52AM
It is worth pointing out that Pope also designed the National Archives building and the DAR concert hall, both in Washington, DC.
Posted by Daniel Rulli on November 6,2009 | 12:44PM
Basically everyone who controls the worlds events, wars, media and industry is a mason. just check out their corporate logos. All are based on symbology used in Freemasonry. I understand the Kaballa is used as well, to perform rituals and magic (sorcery). I also understand that everything that is done in the world has been planned for many years in advance, even all the world wars as outlined by albert pike. World War 111 he states will be between the arabs and the zionists. How can you say have have nothing to hide? They have done nothing but hide their agenda since this idea of masons was started in antiquity. Is that correct?
Posted by michelle on November 15,2009 | 05:09AM