Brown
Lodge No. 22

Brown Lodge No. 22 of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons was the first Black Lodge to be established in Arrow Rock, maybe as early as 1877. We do know they purchased the land on which the lodge was built on March 2, 1881. The Ancient and Accepted Masons of the United States trace their origins to an eighteenth century free black man named Prince Hall who established the first all-black Masonic Lodge in America in Boston, Massachusetts, in the mid-1780s.
In Arrow Rock there were at least four black lodges and three lodge halls (one never owned a building but rented space from another lodge). Brown's Lodge is the lone remaining hall. Lodges provided social functions for their members, but more importantly they provided a network of caring and financial support in the days before insurance and social welfare. Lodges sponsored women's auxiliaries and juvenile groups, also. The Great Depression forced the closure of this lodge.
This site has also been the location of a
summer archaeological
field school beginning in 1996. Not only are archaeologists gathering
valuable information about African American life, they are also
discovering much about a pre-Civil War pottery business that was
located on this block. ArchaeologistTim Baumann was the supervising
archaeologist.
An exhibit on Arrow Rock's African American history is planned for
the building.
After the building was vacated in the 1950s it was pretty much in a
state of "demolition by neglect." Purchased by Virginia and Ted
Fisher, with an eye on its future restoration, the Fishers donated it
and Brown's Chapel to the Friends of Arrow Rock in 1996. Its
restoration was made possible through the Neighborhood Assistance
Program (NAP) tax credit program of the State of Missouri.
