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Thomas Wildey, founder of Odd Fellowship in North America, was a man of immense
vitality, humor, and warmth. Thomas Wildey was born in London, England, in
1782. He was left an orphan five years later - and the Odd Fellow pledge
to "Educate the Orphan" sprang from his personal childhood experiences. At
the age of 14, Wildey went to live with an uncle.After he had 9 years of
schooling, he became an apprentice to a maker of coach springs. He joined
the Odd Fellows in 1804.
When restlessness brought Thomas Wildey to America in
1817, the British were still unpopular in the
States because of the War of 1812. In that year Baltimore was suffering both a yellow fever epidemic and mass unemployment.
An outgoing
personality, Wildey missed companionship and advertised
in the newspaper to determine if there were any other Odd Fellows in Baltimore;
he requested them to meet him at the Seven Stars
Inn.
On April 26, 1819, Wildey and the four men who responded
to the advertisement formed the Independent
Order of Odd Fellows in North America, dedicating the Order to achieve philanthropic goals. Other Englishmen who
were Odd Fellows had
grouped in the states along the Eastern Seaboard, and
Wildey gathered them all into the newly formed
fraternity. He traveled widely to set up lodges in the most recently
settled parts of the country.
At the time of his death in 1861, there were more
than 200,000 members of the
Independent Order of Odd Fellows in 42 states.