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Add stonemasons, stonecutters, and other stone workers to this project. There is a separate project for brick and tile makers. You can visit HistoryLink to find out which projects include your ancestors.
Also called dykers, freemasons, masons, stone cutters, and stone workers.
Includes banker masons, fixer masons, hodsmen, memorial masons, monumental masons, millstone cutters, posters, quarriers, quarry men, rockmen, rubbishers, rubblers, sawyers, scapplers, shot firers, stone carvers, skip makers.
The craft of stonemasonry (or stonecraft) has existed since humanity could use and make tools - creating buildings, structures, and sculpture using stone from the earth. These materials have been used to construct many of the long-lasting, ancient monuments, artifacts, cathedrals, and cities in a wide variety of cultures. Famous works of stonemasonry include the Taj Mahal, Cusco's Incan Wall, Easter Island's statues, the Egyptian Pyramids, Angkor Wat, Borobudur, Tihuanaco, Tenochtitlan, Persepolis, the Parthenon, Stonehenge, and Chartres Cathedral.
Masonry is the craft of shaping rough pieces of rock into accurate geometrical shapes, at times simple, but some of considerable complexity, and then arranging the resulting stones, often together with mortar, to form structures.
Source: Adapted from Stonemasonry at Wikipedia
"The Journeyman Stonecutters Association of North America is the oldest, and perhaps the smallest, active union in North America. Based on a tradition dating back to the masons lodges of the middle ages, the International was founded in 1853. Many of the individual locals began in the 1820's and 30's, and the Washington Stonecutters are said to have marched as a body at the laying of the cornerstone of the U.S. Capitol in 1792. In the late 1960's, due to changing architectural tastes and decreased interest in ornamentation, the union had become quite small. At that time it merged with the Laborers International Union of North America (LIUNA)."
On rare occasion you may be able to find old copies of the Stonecutters Journal, the union newspaper, in libraries or archives. The Journal often had anecdotes about old stonecutters, lists of members who were delinquent in their dues, or reports about jobs. Occasionally there would be a list of local union officials, and sometimes death notices of members. Bear in mind that, at the turn of the century, there were tens of thousands of stonecutters and carvers working in the United States. Chicago alone had over 100 stone mills. The New York local union at one point had around 5000 members, so the occasional list in the Journal of names of a dozen members who hadn't paid their dues isn't too helpful in genealogical research.
Source: Journeyman Stone Cutters Association of North America
St. Castorius is the patron saint of sculptors, stonemasons and stonecutters, and his feast day is November 8th. See also: St. Claude