As a child while waiting with my dad for the light to change on the Elmore, Ohio town hill, I often wondered what those very large plaster letters I O O F meant on the corner building of the main street. Little did I know that it represented the Elmore chapter of the Independent Order of the Odd Fellows, a fraternal organization that began in the U. S in a Baltimore tavern in 1819 with the formation of Washington Lodge No. 1
It became the first fraternity to include both men and
women when it adopted the “Beautiful Rebekah Degree” in 1851. It was sometimes
called the “Triple Links Fraternity” because of its motto “Friendship, Love,
Truth.” During the 19th century, it became the largest fraternal
organization in the nation – larger than the Freemasonry. By 1889, every state
had lodges. It was especially popular among skilled workers and laborers. Yet, Presidents
Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, McKinley, Harding, and FDR were members as well as several
Supreme Court justices.
The IOOF was devastated by the Civil War. Chapters did
not begin to reorganize until some years later. Elmore was designated as Lodge
No. 462 when it organized in May of 1870 with some 32 charter members. John
Jenny being its first brother. Like all lodges, it promoted charity, the
development of character, and relief of sickness and suffering among the
brotherhood. Elmore Lodge members took seriously the command “to visit the
sick, relieve the distressed, bury the dead, and educate the orphan.”
Members accomplished this work through weekly Friday
evening meetings held at 7 p.m. in the hall from October through February and Fridays
at 8 p.m. beginning in June. New members were initiated, dues paid, ceremonies
performed and degrees conferred. From their dues, members paid those who
reported as “sick” one dollar each week. As the years went by, the amount was
raised to $3 per week. But by-laws required that a member must be sick enough
to remain at home. Funeral costs were also covered. Widows received some
compensation from the organization as well. Yet, the Ohio lodges even found
enough funds to build and support a home in Springfield, Ohio, for indigent
members and their families.
Lindsey Lodge Members
The Elmore records were recently discovered and donated to the Harris-Elmore Public Library.