Fame

Nope. (Source)

Fame is not the right word for a stonemason. Nobody's pushing a camera in your face asking about all the intimate details of your life, how you became a stonemason, and gee-whiz what's that funky top wall thingy on a castle called? (It's called a parapet, by the way.)

That doesn't mean there have never been famous stonemasons, although you're more likely to think of them as artists or sculptors; Michelangelo comes to mind, and you know which one we're talking about.

Nowadays, what a stonemason receives, especially if they're the master mason on a build, is a reputation. Your career is built quite literally on your stone creations. If you build gardens using stone, how lovely are they? If you're crafting a building's foundation, how secure can you make it? Are the itty bitty stone birdies on the fountain you carved as beautiful as they could have been? The results build your reputation, which in turn build your career.

Likewise, if your structures go all walls of Jericho and come-a-tumbling down, that's a different kind of reputation. You won't be famous, but hurt enough people and you might become infamous.