🔎 Profile: Carpinteria Masonic Lodge #444 — What we know

Innovation Plan for Lodge 444

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Name: Carpinteria Masonic Lodge #444 (also “Free and Accepted Masons Carpinteria Lodge No. 444”) Cause IQ+1

  • Address: 5421 Carpinteria Ave, Carpinteria, CA 93013. Waze+1

  • Phone number: (805) 684-4433. Waze+1

  • Legal / Tax status: Registered 501(c)(10) fraternal organization under the umbrella of the Grand Lodge of California. Cause IQ+1

  • Mission / Purpose (as described): “Fosters personal growth and strives to improve the lives of both its members and the community.” Freemasonry in CA emphasizes philanthropy, community service, mutual support, and fellowship. Cause IQ+1

  • History / Community recognition: The Lodge was chartered in 1914. In 2014, its centennial was recognized by the city: the City of Carpinteria adopted a resolution acknowledging Lodge #444 as a long-standing community partner for its support of local scholarships, contributions to the local high school kitchen remodel fund, student recognitions, and other community service efforts. carpinteria.granicus.com+1

  • Basic financials (2023, per publicly available data): Revenue ≈ US$168,034; Expenses ≈ US$71,889; Total assets ≈ US$945,365.

Masonic History and similar organizations

A short history and lineage of fraternal organizations in the United States

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Masonic History and similar organizations
 

1. The root: Freemasonry in the U.S.
    •    Freemasonry emerges in England in 1717 and reaches the American colonies by the 1730s. 
    •    By the time of the Revolution, there are lodges throughout the colonies; many civic leaders are Masons, and lodge culture (ritual, officers, degrees, philanthropy) becomes a model for other voluntary associations. 

Key ideas Masonry spreads into U.S. civic life:
    •    Local lodges with officers, bylaws, and initiation rituals
    •    Emphasis on moral improvement, brotherhood, and charity
    •    A semi-secret culture that builds networks of trust across business and politics 

Those patterns become the template for:
    •    Other fraternal orders (Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Elks, Moose, etc.)
    •    Later “open” service clubs (Rotary, Lions, Kiwanis, Optimists, etc.)

Think of Masonry as the prototype of American fraternalism, not the literal parent of every later club.

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