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  • President Harry Truman, third from left, stands with Shrine and...

    Chicago Tribune historical photo

    President Harry Truman, third from left, stands with Shrine and Army leaders at a reception at the Stevens Hotel on July 19, 1949, in Chicago. Truman was in town for the Shriners convention, which included a stop at Medinah Temple.

  • Outside Illinois Masonic Hospital, John Hammond poses with five fellow...

    Chris Walker/Chicago Tribune

    Outside Illinois Masonic Hospital, John Hammond poses with five fellow members of the motor corps from the El Jaala Grotto of Shriners along with their distinctive, white Harley Davidson motorcycles in August 2000.

  • A 4,200-seat auditorium inside the Medinah Temple, seen in 1999,...

    Carl Wagner/Chicago Tribune

    A 4,200-seat auditorium inside the Medinah Temple, seen in 1999, once held events such as the Shrine Circus. The auditorium became retail space for Bloomingdale's.

  • The Medinah Temple at 600 N. Wabash Ave. in Chicago,...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    The Medinah Temple at 600 N. Wabash Ave. in Chicago, on Feb. 23, 2023. The building is scheduled to be the home of a temporary casino that Bally's hopes to open by June.

  • Tenzin Gyatso, the XIV Dalai Lama of Tibet arrives at...

    Tim Zielenbach/AFP via Getty Images

    Tenzin Gyatso, the XIV Dalai Lama of Tibet arrives at the Medinah Temple on July 28, 1996, in Chicago. His Holiness presented his views on "Universal Compassion: the Meaning of Human Life" in the only public talk of his two–week American tour.

  • The corkscrewing atrium at the Bloomingdale's home furnishings store, as...

    Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune

    The corkscrewing atrium at the Bloomingdale's home furnishings store, as seen in 2003, steps outward as it rises and likely reminds shoppers of Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum in New York.

  • Kippy, a standard poodle, posed with Kae, a standard young...

    Chicago Tribune historical photo

    Kippy, a standard poodle, posed with Kae, a standard young elephant, in temporary quarters at Navy Pier in February 1962. Kae and five other young elephants were part of the Medinah Shrine Circus and Kippy was the traveling elephant mascot.

  • Jimmy Carter is applauded by Mayor Daley, Michael Howlett and...

    Val Mazzenga / Chicago Tribune

    Jimmy Carter is applauded by Mayor Daley, Michael Howlett and Gov. Walker at a rally held at the Medinah Temple after a torchlight parade on Sept. 9, 1976.

  • The Medinah Temple, shown here in an undated photo, opened...

    Friedman Properties

    The Medinah Temple, shown here in an undated photo, opened on Oct. 30, 1912 in Chicago.

  • Real Estate developer Al Friedman enters the Bloomingdale's store, housed...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Real Estate developer Al Friedman enters the Bloomingdale's store, housed in the historical Medinah Temple, owned by Friedman Properties on June 13, 2019.

  • Kathy and her mother, Mayor Jane Byrne, are models for...

    Bob Fila / Chicago Tribune

    Kathy and her mother, Mayor Jane Byrne, are models for a day at the Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Fashion Show held at Medinah Temple in Chicago.

  • Steve Wonder sings of his love for Dr. Martin Luther...

    Paul F. Gero / Chicago Tribune

    Steve Wonder sings of his love for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during an evening celebration at Medinah Temple in Chicago on Jan. 15, 1985.

  • As members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and recording engineers...

    Chicago Tribune historical photo

    As members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and recording engineers listen, Georg Solti, center foreground, confers with his producer, David Harvey, and the symphony's co-concertmaster, Victor Aitay, in a temporary control room at Medinah Temple on April 6, 1970.

  • The Chicago Tribune published a story about Medinah Temple's pipe...

    Chicago Tribune

    The Chicago Tribune published a story about Medinah Temple's pipe organist on May 18, 1961.

  • State's Atty. Richard Daley and his wife, Maggie, acknowledge the...

    Val Mazzenga / Chicago Tribune

    State's Atty. Richard Daley and his wife, Maggie, acknowledge the cheers of about 4,500 people who turned out for a "Daley for Mayor" rally at Medinah Temple on North Wabash Avenue in Chicago on Feb. 2, 1983.

  • The Medinah Temple at 600 North Wabash Avenue on March...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    The Medinah Temple at 600 North Wabash Avenue on March 14, 2023, in Chicago. The building is scheduled to house a temporary casino built by Bally's this summer.

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The copper-covered onion domes and colorful terra cotta on the exterior of Medinah Temple are eye-catching, Chicago, and enough to make you wonder what the heck goes on inside a building that looks like that.

The easy answer — a lot through the years.

The four-story Moorish revival fortress at 600 N. Wabash Ave in River North was designed by architecture firm Huehl & Schmid and built in 1912. It hosted elaborate ceremonies of the Chicago chapter of Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine for North America, a Masonic fraternal organization for men that’s met locally since the late 1800s.

The club also built Medinah Country Club in 1925 and Shriners Children’s Chicago hospital in 1926. Known as Shriners International today, the group used Medinah Temple, the building clad in bricks the color of murky clay, for its headquarters until the late 1990s.

The venue has been the site of circuses, political rallies, conventions and other gatherings. It has hosted ice skating demonstrations, dance performances, telethons, do-it-yourself singalongs of Handel’s “Messiah,” a 1997 tribute to songwriter Steve Goodman hosted by Studs Terkel, Bozo the Clown’s 25th anniversary show and a touring production of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol,” starring Jack Palance as Ebenezer Scrooge.

The next tenant for what the Tribune once called an “oasis of Chicago in the desert of Illinois” — a temporary casino.

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Thanks for reading!

— Kori Rumore, visual reporter

Chicago history | More newsletters | Puzzles & Games | Today’s eNewspaper edition

‘Who are these guys?’ Nobody much understands what Shriners do.

Outside Illinois Masonic Hospital, John Hammond poses with five fellow members of the motor corps from the El Jaala Grotto of Shriners along with their distinctive, white Harley Davidson motorcycles in August 2000.
Outside Illinois Masonic Hospital, John Hammond poses with five fellow members of the motor corps from the El Jaala Grotto of Shriners along with their distinctive, white Harley Davidson motorcycles in August 2000.

They drive tricycles and motor bikes and motorized magic carpets and generally make fools of themselves for Founders Day and Arbor Day and any other occasion that requires high school marching bands and the blocking off of streets. Read more here.

History of Medinah Shriners

Story from Sept. 24, 1989: Shriners find a Mecca in the heartland

Story from Aug. 20, 2000: Come along on a magic carpet ride

Another story from Aug. 20, 2000: White knights – atop custom Harleys, Medinah, El Jaala Shriners parade their motorcycle precision in the name of philanthropy

Oct. 13, 1911: Cornerstone laid ‘at the mystic hour of midnight’

The Medinah Temple, shown here in an undated photo, opened on Oct. 30, 1912 in Chicago.
The Medinah Temple, shown here in an undated photo, opened on Oct. 30, 1912 in Chicago.

Nearly 5,000 fez-topped Shriners — half of Medinah’s membership at the time — witnessed the start of construction on what was said to be the largest auditorium in the world erected by a social organization. When opened on Oct. 30, 1912, the Tribune called it the “finest temple of order in the world.” Read more here.

Story from March 4, 1911: Masons get site for new temple

Story from Oct. 31, 1912: Shriners open $650,000 mosque

Oct. 18, 1915: ‘Brilliant instrument’ debuted

The Chicago Tribune published a story about Medinah Temple's pipe organist on May 18, 1961.
The Chicago Tribune published a story about Medinah Temple’s pipe organist on May 18, 1961.

Composer Felix Borowski, accompanied by more than 50 members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, premiered his composition dedicated to Medinah’s order and specifically written to showcase the power of the facility’s new 5,120-pipe organ. Read more here.

Story from May 18, 1961: Pipe organist pumps pedals for 50 years

Medinah Temple hosted its first Shrine circus in 1943. The tradition continued into the late 1990s.

Kippy, a standard poodle, posed with Kae, a standard young elephant, in temporary quarters at Navy Pier in February 1962. Kae and five other young elephants were part of the Medinah Shrine Circus and Kippy was the traveling elephant mascot.
Kippy, a standard poodle, posed with Kae, a standard young elephant, in temporary quarters at Navy Pier in February 1962. Kae and five other young elephants were part of the Medinah Shrine Circus and Kippy was the traveling elephant mascot.

More than 2,500 students attended the first Shrine circus in Medinah Temple, which featured performances by equestrian Poodles Hanneford, Emil Pallenberg’s motorcycle-riding bears, clowns Frank and Ernie Black, Harry E. Pickard’s trumpet-playing seals and the “Great Gregoresco” of whom the Tribune said, “defies gravity and risks death by hanging himself.” Read more here.

Story from March 31, 1912: Hoop la! Coming! Society circus — Shriners of Medinah Temple plan “Most stupendous of ring shows”

Story from March 5, 1999: Children of all ages could lose a temple of fun — Shrine circus sends in clowns, more for Medinah “last dance”

July 19, 1949: Almost 60,000 Shriners — including member President Harry Truman — arrived for group’s 75th anniversary convention

President Harry Truman, third from left, stands with Shrine and Army leaders at a reception at the Stevens Hotel on July 19, 1949, in Chicago. Truman was in town for the Shriners convention, which included a stop at Medinah Temple.
President Harry Truman, third from left, stands with Shrine and Army leaders at a reception at the Stevens Hotel on July 19, 1949, in Chicago. Truman was in town for the Shriners convention, which included a stop at Medinah Temple.

Just three years after a previous visit to Soldier Field, President Harry Truman spoke at the Shriners convention, which was one of the first televised events at Soldier Field. The public was then invited for the first time to observe the organization’s private rituals at Medinah Temple. Read more here.

Story from July 17, 1949: 60,000 Shriners gather here for 5-day convention

April 1970: CSO conductor Georg Solti said recording results were ‘on the negative side’

As members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and recording engineers listen, Georg Solti, center foreground, confers with his producer, David Harvey, and the symphony's co-concertmaster, Victor Aitay, in a temporary control room at Medinah Temple on April 6, 1970.
As members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and recording engineers listen, Georg Solti, center foreground, confers with his producer, David Harvey, and the symphony’s co-concertmaster, Victor Aitay, in a temporary control room at Medinah Temple on April 6, 1970.

Though Chicago Symphony Orchestra had previously taped performances at the facility, its new music director found Medinah Temple’s acoustics to be terrible and was anxious to find a new venue. “If I can’t record here, there is not much for me here,” Solti told the Tribune. Read more here.

Tribune review: “Now that the records have arrived, no one need worry any longer. The sound quality varies from merely brilliant to truly magnificent”

Sept. 9, 1976: ‘We are going to win in Illinois in November because of the unity we’ve created’

Jimmy Carter is applauded by Mayor Daley, Michael Howlett and Gov. Walker at a rally held at the Medinah Temple after a torchlight parade on Sept. 9, 1976.
Jimmy Carter is applauded by Mayor Daley, Michael Howlett and Gov. Walker at a rally held at the Medinah Temple after a torchlight parade on Sept. 9, 1976.

Democratic presidential candidate Jimmy Carter stumped for Illinois Gov. Dan Walker‘s reelection campaign. Carter became the 39th president of the United States. Walker lost the Democratic primary to the Mayor Richard J. Daley-backed Illinois Secretary of State Michael Howlett, who went on to lose the general election to Republican James Thompson by a wide margin. Read more here.

Sept. 23, 1981: Mayor Jane Byrne walks the runway

Kathy and her mother, Mayor Jane Byrne, are models for a day at the Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Fashion Show held at Medinah Temple in Chicago.
Kathy and her mother, Mayor Jane Byrne, are models for a day at the Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Fashion Show held at Medinah Temple in Chicago.

The Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Fashion Show was, for decades, the oldest continuous event of its kind in the United States. Read more here.

Feb. 18, 1983: Richard M. Daley declared, ‘As long as I am mayor, this city never again will be offered for sale.’

State’s Atty. Richard Daley and his wife, Maggie, acknowledge the cheers of about 4,500 people who turned out for a “Daley for Mayor” rally at Medinah Temple on North Wabash Avenue in Chicago on Feb. 2, 1983.

During the final weekend before the Democratic mayoral race, Illinois state attorney Richard M. Daley held an old-fashioned political rally at Medinah Temple with 4,500 people screaming “Daley, Daley, Daley!” Harold Washington won the election. Daley finished third, but became mayor in 1989. Read more here.

Jan. 15, 1985: Daylong celebration of MLK’s life

Steve Wonder sings of his love for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during an evening celebration at Medinah Temple in Chicago on Jan. 15, 1985.
Steve Wonder sings of his love for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during an evening celebration at Medinah Temple in Chicago on Jan. 15, 1985.

Stevie Wonder, who wrote a 1980 tribute to Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. called “Happy Birthday,” performed and counseled teens against street gang violence in observance of the birthday of the slain civil rights leader. Read more here.

How Harold Washington fought for MLK Day — and paid the price

July 28, 1996: Dalai Lama advised, ‘Be a nice person. Be a good person.’

Tenzin Gyatso, the XIV Dalai Lama of Tibet arrives at the Medinah Temple on July 28, 1996, in Chicago. His Holiness presented his views on “Universal Compassion: the Meaning of Human Life” in the only public talk of his two–week American tour.

Actor Richard Gere and composer Philip Glass accompanied the Tibetan spiritual leader, who was visiting Chicago for the second time, during his presentation before a sold-out audience of 4,200 people. Read more here.

Dalai Lama apologizes after video shows him kissing boy

1999: ‘But (what’s there) is a very special building. … Sometimes you need an oasis in big cities’

A 4,200-seat auditorium inside the Medinah Temple, seen in 1999, once held events such as the Shrine Circus. The auditorium became retail space for Bloomingdale's.
A 4,200-seat auditorium inside the Medinah Temple, seen in 1999, once held events such as the Shrine Circus. The auditorium became retail space for Bloomingdale’s.

Though Shriners planned to sell the property to developer Steven Fifield, Mayor Daley said he didn’t want to replace Medinah Temple with a skyscraper. Earlier the same year, Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois placed the building on its endangered list. Ultimately, Fifield walked away from the project. Read more here.

Story from Oct. 31, 1998: Medinah spell falls to reality

Story from Dec. 1, 2000: Shriners to take bids on past as they pack up at Medinah

Feb. 6, 2003: A splendid survivor

The corkscrewing atrium at the Bloomingdale's home furnishings store, as seen in 2003, steps outward as it rises and likely reminds shoppers of Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum in New York.
The corkscrewing atrium at the Bloomingdale’s home furnishings store, as seen in 2003, steps outward as it rises and likely reminds shoppers of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Guggenheim Museum in New York.

The city pledged $12.5 million, and the state another $1.5 million, to fix up Medinah Temple. Friedman Properties redeveloped it into the first standalone Bloomingdale’s home furnishings store, which opened about two years after the then-vacant building, which was facing demolition, was designated a Chicago landmark. Tribune architecture critic Blair Kamin called the update, “delightfully exotic, from the copper-clad onion domes atop its Moorish palazzo facade to the Arabic letters that garnish its exterior like vanilla icing on a chocolate cake.” Read more here.

Mary Schmich: Grand opening hoopla an echo of circus past

August 2018: Macy’s put up ‘for sale’ sign

Real Estate developer Al Friedman enters the Bloomingdale's store, housed in the historical Medinah Temple, owned by Friedman Properties on June 13, 2019.
Real Estate developer Al Friedman enters the Bloomingdale’s store, housed in the historical Medinah Temple, owned by Friedman Properties on June 13, 2019.

Cincinnati-based Macy’s marketed the 130,000-square-foot building at 600 N. Wabash Ave. to potential buyers, with plans to move the Bloomingdale’s home furnishings store into the nearby 900 North Michigan Shops mall. It was scooped up in June 2019 by developer Al Friedman, who led the building’s renovation in the early 2000s, for about $25 million, the Tribune reported. The block also includes the landmark Tree Studios property, a longtime enclave for artists. Read more here.

February 2023: Temporary casino set to occupy vacant building

The Medinah Temple sits at 600 North Wabash is scheduled to house a temporary casino built by Bally's this summer.
The Medinah Temple sits at 600 North Wabash is scheduled to house a temporary casino built by Bally’s this summer.

State gambling regulators signed off on the initial steps toward the opening of a long-debated Chicago casino, voting in favor of licenses for Medinah Temple to serve as the home of a temporary gambling hall that developer Bally’s hopes to open by June. Read more here.

From card dealers to seamstresses, Bally’s Chicago hiring more than 700 to open temporary casino at Medinah Temple

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