Clopay Gallery GD2SU Ultra Grain Medium Oak.
16 x 8 Design 21 with Real REC14 windows close.16 x 8 Custom Design 11 with Arched solid top.16 x 7 Custom Design 31 with Arched solid top.10 x 8 wood & composite doors in our Clifton Design, built by Cunningham!.9 x 9 arched mahogany with herringbone panels.BEFORE and AFTER - Kolbe Craftsman style front door and sidelight and a custom16' x 7'6" Cunningham built steel and composite door with REC13 windows and a faux center post.It also ran out of orphans around the year 1990, and the grounds were used to construct a newer Masonic temple for the local lodges and Order of the Eastern Star chapters. There was another Masonic orphanage in Louisville area, established across the Ohio River in Port Fulton, Indiana (now part of Jeffersonville, Indiana), on the grounds of the former Jefferson General Hospital. In 2009 construction will begin on the property for the Kosair Charities Pediatric Day Care Center that is expected to open in 2010. The Home now accepts residents who are not related to Masons. Once Kentucky state laws forbid using crops grown on the farm to feed the residents, the farm operations were sold off in 1988. Johns Day League Infirmary took care of sick residents. Until the orphans were eventually taught in public schools, originally their education was on the campus, with a cannery, farm operation, print shop, sewing room, and shoe shop there to teach the orphans a trade to support themselves in their adulthood. The Grand Lodge of Kentucky has its offices at the location. Most of the buildings established at the campus are still in existence. The last orphan left in 1989, resulting in the home being solely for senior care. The largest concentration of orphans at the home was 632 in 1930. The Louisville Courier-Journal called it "Little City Beautiful". Construction began in 1925 on the 176-acre (0.71 km 2) location, and the residents moved to it on August 15, 1927. Matthews on Frankfort Avenue, at the cost of $94,100,000. Thus, the decision was made to construct a larger orphan's home than the original in Louisville, to the present-day location in Louisville/St. World War I and the Spanish influenza outbreak following the war caused overcrowding. A tornado on June 2, 1875, damaged the roof and center walls of the original building, but no one was injured. The cornerstone of the original home, located north of Avery Street between First and Second Street in what was previously a cornfield, was laid in 1869, with the first resident admitted on April 7, 1871. The initial starting funds for starting the home was $30,000, with additional funds totaling $20,000 and $12,000 separately. The Kentucky General Assembly chartered the organization in January 1867. It started when a group of Louisville Freemasons on Novemgathered with an intention of creating such a home. The Masonic Widows' and Orphans' Home was formed in 1867 due to a discussion on Novempondering what to do with the number of widows and orphans of Masons caused by the American Civil War the 1867 founding makes Kentucky's Masonic Widows and Orphans Home the oldest Masonic home in North America.