From ABCNews Australia:
Richmond Police District crime manager, Detective Inspector Grant Erickson, said the fire was being treated as arson.
"We have a 36-year-old male from Nimbin and a 32-year-old male from Nimbin ... [who] were arrested at the Lismore Central shopping centre at 11am," he said.
"At this stage it's too early for me to say what the cause and origin of that fire is, but we are definitely treating it as suspicious."
Detective Inspector Erickson said the damage done to the building was "catastrophic".
"It's a beautiful building. It's a landmark in Lismore," he said.
The blaze broke out around 4am in the Magellan Street building, which sits across the road from Lismore's library.
It has been the home of Freemasons in the region for almost 100 years.
The Worshipful Master of Northern Rivers Lodge No. 77, Allan Ridgewell, said Freemasons had been gathering in Lismore since the mid-1800s and had built the lodge in the 1920s to 1930s.
"We've done so much for Lismore over the years; it's just so sad to see it happen," he said.
A wooden building that housed as dance studio and a theatre group behind the temple was completely destroyed by the fire, according to NSW Fire and Rescue acting duty commander Fraser Hindry.
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The Lismore Masonic Temple before the fire |
"[The fire spread] to the roof of the main building, which is a masonry building, and unfortunately the roof collapsed," [Hindry] said.
"The contents of the lodge are pretty well damaged."
Mr Hindry said there was no-one in the building at the time of the fire and there had been no reports of injuries.
While the ornate facade of the building is still standing, the back of the building and another structure behind the main hall have been destroyed.
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From a 2011 photo of the lodge room. The lodge was largely submerged under the flooding in 2022. |
The lodge had already suffered a terrible loss just a few years ago. The town of Lismore was devastated in 2022 by a major flood that destroyed most of the lodges's original furniture, records, and more. Four days of torrential rains caused the Northern Rivers to rise almost 40 feet, flooding the town and displacing 31,000 residents.
Local donations from other lodges and the community were instrumental in restoring the building enough for the Masons to move back in recently. The future of the lodge is now unclear.
When Magistrate Janet Wahlquist released Surtees and Mayne on bail Thursday, she did so, in spite of saying she was "concerned" about Surtees' mental health. But she DID stipulate as part of his bail restrictions that he must stay away from lighters and matches, and stay away from the Masonic lodge - that he had already burned down.
Really. I couldn't possibly make that up.
Released on bail? Yikes!
ReplyDeleteJust why .?Thankfully no deaths
ReplyDelete