Brotherly Love
By the exercise of Brotherly Love, we are taught to regard the whole human species as one family — to aid, support, and protect one another.
Making Good Men Better Since 1868
Pueblo Lodge No. 17 was chartered on October 7, 1868 — eighteen years before the city of Pueblo would consolidate into its modern form, and eight years before Colorado became a state.
For more than a century and a half, the Brethren of No. 17 have practiced the ancient craft of Freemasonry in this corner of the Arkansas River Valley. We are not a social club. We are a fraternity of men who believe in a Supreme Being and who have committed to walking a path of self-improvement, service, and the principal tenets of Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth.
If those words resonate with you, we invite you to learn more.
2nd & 4th Mondays
Lodge opens at 7:30 PM
126 Broadway Avenue
Pueblo, Colorado 81004
October 7, 1868
Grand Lodge of Colorado, A.F. & A.M.
District 26
Southern Colorado Region
By the practice of Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth, a Mason is taught to regard the whole human species as one family — and to act, in every walk of life, as a man of integrity and honor.
By the exercise of Brotherly Love, we are taught to regard the whole human species as one family — to aid, support, and protect one another.
To soothe the unhappy, sympathize with their misfortunes, compassionate their miseries, and restore peace to their troubled minds is the great aim we have in view.
Truth is a divine attribute and the foundation of every virtue. To be good men and true is the first lesson we are taught in Freemasonry.
Dinner served at 6:30 PM. Lodge opens at 7:30 PM.
Memorial Day observance preceding the meeting.
Officer planning for summer recess.
Final meeting before going dark for July & August.
When our charter was issued in October 1868, "Pueblo" was still four small settlements clustered along the Arkansas River. The town would not consolidate and incorporate in its present form until 1886.
The Brethren of No. 17 have laid cornerstones, raised funds for those struck by the great Flood of 1921, raised generations of young men into the Craft, and kept the lights burning through the Steel City's quiet years and its renaissance alike.
Freemasonry has never solicited members. A man must come of his own free will and accord, and request to be made a Mason. If you are a man of good character who believes in a Supreme Being and is over the age of eighteen — write to us.