The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
$10.2M project to restore civil rights icon
Prince Hall Masonic Lodge housed the first office of the SCLC.
The original home of the civil rights group led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is getting a $10.2 million facelift.
The Prince Hall Masonic Lodge on Auburn Avenue — known for its old-school white and green neon sign hanging off a corner — housed the first office of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. It will get a new roof, windows, air conditioning, electrical works, elevator and a recreation of King’s office.
Numerous documents and memorabilia related to King and the civil rights movement stored inside the building will be preserved, according to a report prepared by architectural firm Lord Aeck Sargent.
The National Park Service will open a visitors center on the ground floor to provide public access. It manages the building, though the Masons still own and use it for meetings.
They have wanted to rehab the property for years, said lodge member Ed Bowen, a real estate developer leading the project.
“The building has been maintained over the years, but it hasn’t had any significant structural improvements,” he said.
Black civic leader John Wesley Dobbs developed the three-story, yellow brick building in 1937 as a meeting place for Prince Hall Free- masons.
The lodge also housed the nation’s first Black-owned radio station, WERD-AM. Jesse Blayton, an Atlanta University professor, pur- chased the station in 1949 and changed its format to appeal to the Black com- munity, according to Lord Aeck Sargent.
The SCLC was organized in Atlanta in 1957 by King, Ralph David Abernathy and others to fight racism, but has its roots in the 1955 Mont- gomery bus boycott, where the two men were pastors.
Like many sites around Atlanta that commemorate African American history, the Prince Hall lodge restoration was shepherded by civil rights icon John Lewis, who died in 2020. The former congressman for years pushed for the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site to be upgraded to National Historic Park status, making it eligible for more park rangers and other resources. When that occurred in 2018, the lodge was added.
The two upper floors will be renovated as office space for small businesses and as meeting space for the nine Masonic groups that use the building, including the East- ern Star of Georgia.
Lejuano Varnell, executive director of preservation group Sweet Auburn Works, said assigning multiple uses to the building is the best way to serve the neighborhood and the national interest.
“Every existing historic building in our [district] serves a dual role,” he said.
“It will serve commercial tenants and tourists alike.”
Invest Atlanta, the city’s economic development agency, in February approved a final piece of the renovation financing, a $1.5 million Eastside Tax Allocation District grant. Federal tax credits for historic preservation and private donations are also funding the project.
The building’s original design will remain wholly intact, including all decorative brick, stone and clay tile features, Bowen said.
“It will look exactly as it did during the time of its heyday,” he said.
And they’re keeping and restoring the neon sign.
“The National Park Service loves that sign, and so do the Masons,” Bowen said. “We’re going to make it look like it once did.”
The project is scheduled to start in April and be completed by August.