Naval Lodge No. 4
Washington DC
Naval Lodge No. 4 was originally chartered as Washington Naval Lodge No. 41 by the Grand Lodge of
Maryland in 1805. However, only six years later, it joined with five other lodges in the federal district
to form the new Grand Lodge of Washington, DC, and was re‐chartered as Naval Lodge No. 4. Because of its
start as a Maryland Lodge, Naval Lodge retains some parts of the Maryland ritual, making it the only
Lodge in Washington to do so.
Originally, Naval Lodge was made up mainly of workers in the Navy Yard. In the early 1800s the Navy Yard
was one of the largest employers in the city, and the Navy, freshly returned victorious from the war with
Tripoli, enjoyed high regard.
Although the minutes of the first five years of the Lodge's existence have been lost, it is probable
that the Lodge met in a small house just outside the gates of the Navy Yard (1129 Seventy St., SE which,
alas, is now a parking lot) until 1821.
In 1821, the lodge built and moved into a building on the Northwest corner of Fifth