Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 896 – The Omaha Scottish Rite, 1914

Copyright © 2019 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

Postcard of the Omaha Scottish Rite.
Photograph from my visit to the Omaha Scottish Rite during June 2018.

In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Some new Masonic work for Omaha, Nebr.” Moses was referring to the new scenery and stage machinery purchased for the Omaha Scottish Rite Temple on Twentieth and Douglas streets. The firm previously delivered some scenery for Scottish Rite degree work for the Masonic Temple on Sixteenth and Capitol Avenue. The 1914 work mentioned by Moses was an addition to an earlier collection delivered by Sosman & Landis.

Omaha was one of four Scottish Rite meeting places in the state, with the other three located in Lincoln, Fremont and Hastings. In 1914, Sosman & Landis also worked on other Scottish Rite projects that Moses recorded, “furnished a lot of work for the boys.”

On May 18, 1914, the “Omaha Daily Bee” reported:

“Scottish Rite Initiation to Be in Last in Old Building. A class of fourteen will receive the twenty-first degree in Scottish rite masonry Monday evening at the Masonic temple, Sixteenth street and Capitol avenue. This is the last class which will receive the preceptor degree in the old Masonic temple, as it is believed that the new Scottish Rite temple at Twentieth and Douglas streets will be completed and occupied by the order at the time of the initiation of the next class. Refreshments will be served following the initiation Monday evening” (page 10).

The Spring Reunion boasted a class of forty-cone candidates who received the fourth to eighteenth degrees, using Sosman & Landis scenery previously purchased for degree productions. During the two-day reunion, Scottish Rite degree work for the fourth to fourteenth degrees were completed on Tuesday and degree work for the fifteenth to eighteenth degrees were completed on Wednesday. This means that the original Scottish Rite stage in Omaha only had scenery to use for the fourth to eighteenth degrees. A list of all the candidates was published in the “Omaha Daily Bee” on 25 March 1914 (page 3). By the next spring reunion, there were one hundred Scottish Rite candidates in the class at the new building (Omaha Daily Bee, 25 March 1915, page 8).

Images of the Omaha Scottish Rite before it was dedicated in 1914.

The dedication ceremonies in the new building were held on November 16. The Omaha Scottish Rite was erected at a cost of over $225,000. Of the Omaha Scottish Rite’s new home, the “Omaha Daily Bee” reported, “The new Scottish Rite Cathedral is a three story structure, with high basement, built of Bedford granite, with imposing Ionic columns and porticos. The auditorium on the second and third floors where the initiations will take place, is an attractive modern theater, with a stage 30×40 feet and a seating capacity of about 1,000. It is tinted in cream with pink decorated panels and has all the arrangements for lighting, stage settings and precautions against fire, of the most up to minute theater. It has a wardrobe and paraphernalia room adjoin” (1 Nov. 1915, page 25). The size and scope of the project increased over course of the year.

The Omaha Scottish Rite.
The Omaha Scottish Rite.
The Omaha Scottish Rite.

M. C. Lilley & Co. of Columbus, Ohio, received the contracted for Omaha’s Scottish Rite theater. They subcontracted the 1914 set of scenery to Sosman & Landis. Keep in mind that by 1914, Moses had been associated with Sosman & Landis since 1880.  He was the current vice-president of the firm and supervised all design, construction, painting and installation. He also negotiated many of the contracts. After Landis’ passing, Moses’ role in the company continued to expand, while Sosman’s responsibilities diminished.  It was not easy sailing for Moses during this time; especially when studio projects continued to increase, necessitating the use of annex studios and regional offices.

In 1914, the Omaha Scottish Rite project also encountered a series of snags during planning and production. First and foremost, there was a misunderstanding concerning who was responsible for the structural work necessary to support the scenic drops. It was unusual for anyone else besides M. C. Lilley or Sosman & Landis to install the stage machinery, so I m perplexed that this was an issue. Part of the standard procedure for Scottish Rite scenery installations at that time was that they were suspended from “Brown’s special system.” There was always a company representative who was there during the first reunion to help supervise the operation of the system.

Furthermore, the Omaha Valley Scottish Rite reduced the number of drops to less than half due to the expense, likely deciding to reuse much of the original scenery collection; a common practice for many Scottish Rite’s at the time, but this bit into the expenses expended by the studio during the planning and designing process. The original plan for eighty line sets sixty line sets was reduced to sixty, greatly affecting the final workload and anticipated profits. These two factors, contributed to a delay in the final delivery of the scenery, so it was not until the Spring Reunion of 1915 that everything was in place. That scenery remained in place for the next eight decades.

In 1980, Dr. John R. Rothgeb of the University of Texas in Austin inquired about the original scenery. He received a response from the Secretary D. William Dean that April. Dean responded that the Omaha Scottish Rite currently owned 47 “beautiful curtain drops.” He then wrote, “…and they are all originals. They are remarkably in good condition considering their age as is also the Building which we have tried to keep in the very best of repair.” Over the course of the next sixteen years, however, someone would make the decision to get rid of these drops and purchase a the used scenery from the Kansas City Scottish Rite.

The Omaha Scottish Rite purchased from the Scottish Rite scenery collection from Kansas City, Kansas in 1996 for $40,000. The Kansas City, KS, Scottish Rite scenery dates from the 1950s. It was painted by Maj. Don Carlos DuBois, representing the Great Western Stage Equipment Co. I was able examine all of the current backdrops at the Scottish Rite Theatre in Omaha, Nebraska, on June 15, 2018, while driving south for  “The Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple: Freemasonry, Architecture and Theatre” book signing.

The Kansas City Scottish Rite sold their scenery to the Omaha Scottish Rite in 1996.

The used scenery was available for purchase because the Kansas City Scottish Rite put it’s building on the market in 1996 and moved to a new location. I initially learned of the collection’s relocation to Omaha while researching Scottish Rite compositions for my doctoral dissertation. For a while, the entire set of backdrops was posted online at the time. In the end $140, 000 was spent to purchase, remove, transport, and install the new drops in Omaha. Stylistically, the painted aesthetic of each collections was decades apart.

I still don’t know what happened to the original 1914 Sosman & Landis scenery, as only bits and pieces of stage machinery remain in lobby display cases.

To be continued…

Author: waszut_barrett@me.com

Wendy Rae Waszut-Barrett, PhD, is an author, artist, and historian, specializing in painted settings for opera houses, vaudeville theaters, social halls, cinemas, and other entertainment venues. For over thirty years, her passion has remained the preservation of theatrical heritage, restoration of historic backdrops, and the training of scenic artists in lost painting techniques. In addition to evaluating, restoring, and replicating historic scenes, Waszut-Barrett also writes about forgotten scenic art techniques and theatre manufacturers. Recent publications include the The Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple: Freemasonry, Architecture and Theatre (Museum of New Mexico Press, 2018), as well as articles for Theatre Historical Society of America’s Marquee, InitiativeTheatre Museum Berlin’s Die Vierte Wand, and various Masonic publications such as Scottish Rite Journal, Heredom and Plumbline. Dr. Waszut-Barrett is the founder and president of Historic Stage Services, LLC, a company specializing in historic stages and how to make them work for today’s needs. Although her primary focus remains on the past, she continues to work as a contemporary scene designer for theatre and opera.

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