Battle Creek Shrine Club

Battle Creek Shrine Club Home of the Battle Creek Shrine Club. The club meets on the first Tuesday of the month at 7:00pm These guys wanted a fraternity that stressed fun and fellowship.

The Shrine's charitable arm is the Shriners Hospitals for Children, a network of twenty-two hospitals in the United States, Mexico and Canada. In June 1920, the Imperial Council Session voted to establish a "Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children." The goal of this hospital was to treat orthopedic injuries, diseases, and birth defects in children.

History of the Shriners

Shriners International is, at its most basic level, a fraternity. It all started in Manhattan in 1870 when some members of what’s considered the world’s oldest fraternity – Masonry – were hanging out at their favorite tavern. They felt that Masonry, which traces its roots to stonemasons and craftsmen of the Middle Ages, was a tad too focused on ritual. Two of those gentlemen – Walter M Fleming, M.D., and Billy Florence, an actor – took that idea and ran with it. Florence came up with the idea for a Near Eastern-themed party after attending a party thrown by an Arabian diplomat. Fleming added the structure, drafting the fraternity’s name, initiation rites, rituals and rules. Together, Fleming and Florence designed the fraternity’s emblem, devised a salutation and determined that the red fez with the black tassel would be the group’s official headgear. The first chapter, Mecca Shriners, met in New York City in 1872. As word got out about the fledgling organization, membership grew rapidly, spreading across the U.S. In the early 1900s, membership spread into Canada, Mexico and Panama. Today there are approximately 309,000 Shriners belonging to 195 chapters in the U.S., Canada, Germany, Mexico, the Philippines, Puerto Rico and the Republic of Panama.

Address

21945 N Bedford Road
Bedford, MI
49017

General information

Fifteen years after the idea of the Mystic Shrine was conceived at New York City's ''Knickerbocker Cottage," eleven Shriners, ten of whom were residents of Grand Rapids, with one visitor from New York's Mecca Temple, met in the "Ordinary Room" adjacent to the lobby of the Morton House. March 27, 1886 was the date when this landmark hotel in Grand Rapids was the scene of a meeting to formulate plans for the organization of a Temple of the Mystic Shrine to be seated in Grand Rapids. Nobles present at this historic meeting were:

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