Alexandria (Va.)
Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings
Found in 49 Collections and/or Records:
Mechanical Shrine Parade, undated
Item — Box 2
Identifier: A1987-999-025
Scope and Contents
Postcard shows part of a display on the Shrine of North America and Shriners Hospitals for Crippled Children, at the "Shrine Rooms East" Museum at the George Washington Masonic Memorial Building.
Dates:
undated
Mural of the Pilgrimage to Mecca, undated
File — Box 2
Identifier: A1987-999-026
Scope and Contents
2 postcards that show a 50-foot mural in the Shriners Imperial Room at the George Washington Masonic Memorial Building.
Dates:
undated
Shriners Hospitals Room, undated
Item — Box 2
Identifier: A1987-999-028
Scope and Contents
Bronze statues and mural of children cured at the Shriners Hospitals for Crippled Children in the Shriners Hospitals Room at the George Washington Masonic Memorial Building.
Dates:
undated
Souvenir postcard folder from Alexandria, Virginia, 1958
Collection — Box 6, Folder: 1
Identifier: A2010-056-001
Scope and Contents
Souvenir folder of connected postcards from Alexandria, Virginia, includes views of George Washington Masonic National Memorial, Mount Vernon, Home of Robert E. Lee, and Christ Church
Dates:
1958
Found in:
Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library
The George Washington Masonic National Memorial, Alexandria, Virginia, 1945
Item
Identifier: A1996-066-4927
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The Ralph B. Duncan postcard collection consists of postcards with a Masonic connection, either a building used for Masonic purposes, a person connected to Freemasonry, or a subject concerning Freemasonry. Mostly made during 1907-1940s, there are some that are both earlier and later, which can be determined by changes in postcard conventions. Included are portraits, views of buildings, cartoons, among other subjects. Most of the postcards of buildings are in the United States, with some from...
Dates:
1945
Three photographs of the George Washington Masonic National Memorial, 1931-1932
Collection
Identifier: A2023-047-001
