San Jose Valley
- 1904 -

San
Jose, a little village of about 3,000 in 1849, was the first Capital of
California, almost two years before California was admitted to the union
in 1851. San Jose Lodge No. 10 was working in 1850 under dispensation from
the new Grand Lodge with a membership of 22. At the end of the Civil War,
it stood at 90. In 1871, As Masonry grew with
the expansion of the town, Friendship Lodge No. 210 was chartered. By mid
1873 there was a total of 244 active Master Masons in San Jose.
Many of the Masons, some of them already Scottish
Rite members, were interested in establishing the Bodies in San Jose.
Albert Pike 33o communicated the degrees of the Lodge of
Perfection to several In May of 1883 and two years later on March 10,
1885, Albert 0. Mackey Lodge of Perfection No. 13 was organized.
Shortly thereafter it closed, for reasons not quite clear. Almost 20 years
later a new San Jose Lodge of Perfection No. 10 began working under
Letters Temporary from November 10, 1904 until it was chartered more than
7 years later on February 17, 1912. Letters Temporary were issued
for the San Jose Chapter of Rose Croix in March 1908 and both
the Council of Kadosh and Consistory were chartered in 1913.
The initial meetings were held in the old Masonic
Hall (Rutherford Hall) on the southwest corner of Second and San Fernando
Streets. During the next five years the Rite had two or three different
meeting places. Work on a new Scottish Rite Temple located on 148 North
Third Street began in early April 1909. Although meetings had been held in
the new Temple since Spring, 1909, it was not dedicated until January 22,
1910. The Rite, by now, had 154 members. A resolution was passed that
stated, "neither the Temple nor any part may be loaned or leased to
any person or organization." The Rite grew at such a pace that less
than a dozen years passed and a new Temple was built on the southeast
corner of Third and James Streets, just three doors north of the old
Temple.
The Scottish Rite Temple was built in 1924 by
Carl Werner. Commissioned by the local Masonic Order, the
three-story neo-classical structure is located in St. James Park at the
corner of St. James and Third St, San Jose, California. The building
is now the home of the San Jose Athletic Club. The auditorium seated 1,400
and the Rite boasted
the largest stage in San Jose. In addition to lounges, library, and club
rooms, its kitchen and dining room facilities accommodated 1,000 people.
It was dedicated May 8, 1925. (1)
The Rite became concerned about the physical
condition of the Temple and of the decline of the neighborhood. They
started raising funds for a new building and purchased 38 acres in 1963
for $ 600,000. In 1967 they sold five-and-one-half acres to the San Jose
Masonic Temple Association and several acres to the Faith Temple Church.
In 1980 the old Temple was sold, but the buyer demanded immediate
occupancy and so in the summer of 1980 the Rite leased an abandoned school
on Washington Street in Santa Clara. With money from the sale of real
estate they were able to begin construction of a new Temple 2455 Masonic
Drive.
The first floor was completed and the Bodies
moved in. The
Cornerstone Laying and Dedication Ceremonies were held July 8, 1984. The
building is two high stories and contains 40,100 feet of floor space. The
Lodge room seats 500 and dining room facilities handle nearly 450 persons.
Even with lounges, offices, a large recreation room, library and museum,
wardroom and makeup rooms, there is still room for future expansion. the
facilities are used by concordant Masonic bodies and are rented to the
public on a space-available basis.
For the first time, a new building was
specifically designed to house a Childhood Language Disorders Clinic.
There are plans to expand Clinic in the future. (2)

Bibliography
Sources
My
thanks to all those, names and nameless,
who helped me amass the materials used in compiling
this history of the Orient of California.
Ill:.
Robert D. Haas 33°
1. California First
Century of Scottish Rite Masonry p. 239 ff.
San Jose Bodies
2. Dalton A. Noland, 32o,
K.C.C.H., and Others.