


Medinah Country Club
We are honored to be able to have our
reception at Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Illinois. It is a beautiful
location and we hope you enjoy a wonderful evening of cocktails, dinner
and dancing.
Here is a little more information about the history of the club.
In the early 1920's a group of Shriners from Chicago's Medinah Temple had a dream to create a country retreat. Their goal was to build the best country club in North America with a 54-hole golf complex and a variety of other recreational activities. They selected several parcels of land in an area then known as Meacham, in northern DuPage County, which was once owned by the Meacham, Lawrence and Rosenwinkel families.
Tom Bendelow, a world-renowned golf course architect from Scotland, was retained to design the golf courses. In September of 1925, the Shriners enjoyed their first round of golf at Medinah on Course #1. Construction on Course #2 was completed a year later. Both of these courses have hosted a variety of amateur, professional, and Chicago District Golf Association events. Course #3, originally designed for Medinah's ladies, was completed in 1928. That original Bendelow layout only lasted for three years. A major redesign took place in the early 1930's
While the golf courses were being constructed,
Richard G. Schmid was hired to plan and design the clubhouse. Schmid had
a flair for blending the classic lines of Byzantine, Oriental, Louis XIV,
and Italian architecture characteristic of many Masonic structures. His
design gave Medinah's clubhouse the taste, style, and elegance still evident
today. Schmid's plans were carefully executed with Schmidt Brothers Construction
Company as general contractor. The Schmidt Brothers (Otto, August, and Ernest)
were Shriners and charter members of Medinah. The rotunda and murals were
the work of another club member, Gustav A. Brand, a German-born artist.
Shriners were familiar with Brand's work on the Chicago Medinah Temple and
other historic sites.
In the late 1920's, Medinah had approximately 1,500 members. The onset of
the Great Depression created great financial hardship. As many members withdrew,
the club waived initiation fees, lowered dues, instituted fundraising events,
launched golf tournaments, and soon thereafter eliminated the requirement
that only Shriners could join Medinah. World War II brought more economic
misfortune and the club's membership dropped far below capacity. Course
#2 was closed, and for a time members helped maintain the other two courses.
The end of the war brought slow but stable economic recovery, new hope,
and gradual growth in the club's membership

