Introduction
What is a Shriner? What kind of organization attracts truck drivers, dentists, contractors, heads of state,
movie stars, generals, clergymen and accountants? What is the Shrine?
Someone might answer: "Oh yeah, Shriners are those guys who always have those parades with the wild costumes
and funny little cars." Another might think of Shrine circuses and Shrine clowns. The fellow next to him might
interject, "No, Shriners are the guys who wear those funny hats — like flowerpots — and have those big conventions."
"I don't know about that," a passerby might add. "But I do know my little girl was born with
club feet and now they are straight, and she can walk like anyone else, thanks to Shriners Hospitals for Children."
"She can walk?" questions still another. "I thought the Shriners ran those fantastic burn hospitals.
I've read stories about them saving kids with burns on 90 percent of their bodies."
All those people are right. Each has experienced an aspect of Shrinedom. What they cannot experience, unless
they are Shriners, is the camaraderie, deep friendships, good fellowship and great times shared by all Shriners.
What they may not know is that all Shriners share a Masonic heritage: Each is a Master Mason in the Freemasonry
fraternity.
There are approximately 500,000 Shriners now. They gather in Temples, or chapters, throughout the United States,
Canada, Mexico and the Republic of Panama. There are 22 Shriners Hospitals for Children — 18 orthopaedic hospitals,
three burn hospitals, and one hospital that provides orthopaedic, burn and spinal cord injury care. These hospitals
have cured or substantially helped more than 700,000 children — at no cost to parent or child — since the first
Shriners Hospital opened in 1922.
How did it all start? How does it work? What is the Shrine?
The evolution of the "World's Greatest Fraternity"
In 1870, several thousand
of the 900,000 residents of Manhattan were Masons. Many of these Masons made it a point to lunch at the Knickerbocker
Cottage, a restaurant at 426 Sixth Avenue. At a special table on the second floor, a particularly jovial group
of men used to meet regularly.
The Masons who gathered at this table were noted for their good humor and wit. They often discussed the idea
of a new fraternity for Masons, in which fun and fellowship would be stressed more than ritual. Two of the table
regulars, Walter M. Fleming, M.D., and William J. Florence, an actor, took the idea seriously enough to do something
about it.
Billy Florence was a star. After becoming the toast of the New York stage, he toured London, Europe and Middle
Eastern countries, always playing to capacity audiences. While on tour in Marseilles, France, Florence was invited
to a party given by an Arabian diplomat. The entertainment was something in the nature of an elaborately staged
musical comedy. At its conclusion, the guests became members of a secret society.
The founders of the Shrine
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Walter Fleming
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William Florence
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Florence, recalling the conversations at the Knickerbocker Cottage, realized that this might well be the vehicle
for the new fraternity. He made copious notes and drawings at that initial viewing and on two other occasions when
he attended the ceremony, once in Algiers and again in Cairo. When he returned to New York in 1870 and showed his
material to Dr. Fleming, Fleming agreed.
Dr. Walter Millard Fleming was a prominent physician and surgeon. Born in 1838, he obtained a degree in medicine
in Albany, N.Y., in 1862. During the Civil War, he was a surgeon with the 13th New York Infantry Brigade of the
National Guard. He then practiced medicine in Rochester, New York, until 1868, when he moved to New York City and
quickly became a leading practitioner.
Fleming was devoted to fraternalism. He became a Mason in Rochester and took some of his Scottish Rite work
there, then completed his degrees in New York City. He was coroneted a 33° Scottish Rite Mason on September
19, 1872.
Fleming took the ideas supplied by Florence and converted them into what would become the Ancient Arabic Order
of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (A.A.O.N.M.S.). While there is some question about the origin of the Fraternity's
name, it is probably more than coincidence that its initials, rearranged, spell out the words "A MASON."
With the help of other Knickerbocker Cottage regulars, Fleming drafted the ritual, designed the emblem and ritual
costumes, formulated a salutation, and declared that members would wear a red fez.
The initiation rites, or ceremonials, were drafted by Fleming with the help of three Brother Masons: Charles
T. McClenachan, lawyer and expert on Masonic Ritual; William Sleigh Paterson, printer, linguist and ritualist;
and Albert L. Rawson, prominent scholar and Mason who provided much of the Arabic background.
The Emblem
The Crescent was adopted as the Jewel of the Order. Though any materials can be used in forming the Crescent,
the most valuable are the claws of a Royal Bengal Tiger, united at their base in a gold setting. In the center
is the head of a sphinx, and on the back are a pyramid, an urn and a star. The Jewel bears the motto "Robur
et Furor," which means "Strength and Fury." Today, the Shrine emblem includes a scimitar from which
the crescent hangs, and a five-pointed star beneath the head of the sphinx.
The Salutation
Dr. Fleming and his coworkers also formulated a salutation used today by Shriners — "Es Selamu Aleikum!"
— which means, "Peace be with you!" In returning the salutation, the gracious wish is "Aleikum Es
Selamu," which means "With you be peace."
The Fez

The red fez with a black tassel, the Shrine's official headgear, has been handed down through the ages. It derives
its name from the place where it was first manufactured — the holy city of Fez, Morocco.
Some historians claim it dates back to about A.D. 980, but the name of the fez, or tarboosh, does not appear
in Arabic literature until around the 14th cen-tury. One of the earliest references to the headgear is in "Arabian
Nights."
The First Meeting
On September 26, 1872, in the New York City Masonic Hall, the first Shrine Temple in the United States was organized.
Brother McClenachan and Dr. Fleming had completed the ritual and proposed that the first Temple be named Mecca.
The original 13 Masons of the Knickerbocker Cottage lunch group were named Charter Members of Mecca Temple. Noble
Florence read a letter outlining the "history" of the Order and giving advice on the conduct of meetings.
The officers elected were Walter M. Fleming, Potentate; Charles T. McClenachan, Chief Rabban; John A. Moore, Assistant
Rabban; Edward Eddy, High Priest and Prophet; George W. Millar, Oriental Guide; James S. Chappel, Treasurer; William
S. Paterson, Recorder; and Oswald M. d'Aubigne, Captain of the Guard.
But the organization was not an instant success, even though a second Temple was chartered in Rochester in 1875.
Four years after the Shrine's beginnings, there were only 43 Shriners, all but six of whom were from New York.
The Imperial Council
At a meeting of Mecca Temple on June 6, 1876, in the New York Masonic Temple, a new body was created to help
spur the growth of the young fraternity. This governing body was called "The Imperial Grand Council of the
Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine for the United States of America." Fleming became
the first Imperial Grand Potentate, and the new body established rules for membership and the formation of new
Temples. The initiation ritual was embellished, as was the mythology about the fraternity. An extensive publicity
and recruiting campaign was initiated.
It worked. Just two years later, in 1878, there were 425 Shriners in 13 Temples. Five of these Temples were
in New York, two were in Ohio and the others were in Vermont, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Iowa, Michigan and Massachusetts.
The Shrine continued to grow during the 1880s. By the time of the 1888 Annual Session (convention) in Toronto,
there were 7,210 members in 48 Temples located throughout the United States and one in Canada.
While the organization was still primarily social, instances of philanthropic work became more frequent. During
an 1888 Yellow Fever epidemic in Jacksonville, Fla., members of the new Morocco Temple and Masonic Knights Templar
worked long hours to relieve the suffering populace. In 1889, Shriners came to the aid of the Johnstown Flood victims.
In 1898, there were 50,000 Shriners, and 71 of the 79 Temples were engaged in some sort of philanthropic work.
By the turn of the century, the Shrine had come into its own. At its 1900 Imperial Session, representatives
from 82 Temples marched in a Washington, D.C., parade reviewed by President William McKinley. Shrine membership
was well over 55,000.
Evolution of the "World's Greatest Philanthropy"

The Shrine was unstoppable in the early 1900s. Membership grew rapidly, and the geographical range of Temples
widened. Between 1900 and 1918, eight new Temples were created in Canada, and one each in Honolulu, Mexico City
and the Republic of Panama. The organization became, in fact, the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic
Shrine for North America. New flourishes were added to a growing tradition of colorful pageantry. More Shrine bands
were formed. The first Shrine circus is said to have opened in 1906 in Detroit.
During the same period, there was growing member support for establishing an official Shrine charity. Most Temples
had individual philanthropies, and sometimes the Shrine as an organization gave aid. After the 1906 earthquake
in San Francisco, the Shrine sent $25,000 to help the stricken city, and in 1915, the Shrine contributed $10,000
for the relief of European war victims. But neither the individual projects nor the special one-time contributions
satisfied the membership, who wanted to do more.
In 1919, Freeland Kendrick (Lu Lu Temple, Philadelphia) was the Imperial Potentate-elect for the 363,744 Shriners.
He had long been searching for a cause for the thriving group to support. In a visit to the Scottish Rite Hospital
for Crippled Children in Atlanta, he became aware of the overwhelming needs of crippled children in North America.
At the June 1919 Imperial Session, Kendrick proposed establishing "The Mystic Shriners Peace Memorial for
Friendless, Orphaned and Crippled Children." His resolution never came to a vote. As Imperial Potentate in
1919 and 1920, he traveled more than 150,000 miles, visiting a majority of the 146 Temples and campaigning for
an official Shrine philanthropy.
The climax came at the June 1920 Imperial Session in Portland, Oregon. Kendrick changed his resolution to one
establishing the "Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children," to be supported by a $2 yearly assessment
from each Shriner.
Conservative Shriners expressed doubts about the Shrine assuming this kind of responsibility. Prospects for
approval were dimming when Noble Forrest Adair (Yaarab Temple, Atlanta) rose to speak:
"I was lying in bed yesterday morning, about four o'clock . . . and some poor fellow who had strayed from
the rest of the band . . . stood down there under the window for 25 minutes playing 'I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles.'
"
He said that when he awoke later, "I thought of the wandering minstrel, and I wondered if there were not
a deep significance in the tune that he was playing for Shriners, 'I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles.' "
He noted, "While we have spent money for songs and spent money for bands, it's time for the Shrine to spend
money for humanity.
"I want to see this thing started. Let's get rid of all the technical objections. And if there is a Shriner
in North America," he continued, "who objects to having paid the two dollars after he has seen the first
crippled child helped, I will give him a check back for it myself."
When he was through, Noble Adair sat down to thunderous applause. The whole tone of the session had changed.
There were other speakers, but the decision had already been reached. The resolution was passed unanimously.
A committee was chosen to determine the site and personnel for the Shriners Hospital. After months of work,
research and debate, the committee concluded that there should be not just one hospital but a network of hospitals
throughout North America. It was an idea that appealed to Shriners, who liked to do things in a big and colorful
way. When the committee brought the proposal to the 1921 Imperial Session in Des Moines, Iowa, it too was passed.
First Hospital

Before the June 1922 Session, the cornerstone was in place for the first Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children
in Shreveport, La. The rules for this hospital, and all the other Shriners Hospitals which would follow, were simple:
To be admitted, a child must be from a family unable to pay for the orthopaedic treatment he would receive, be
under 14 years of age (later increased to 18) and be, in the opinion of the chief of staff, someone whose condition
could be helped.
The work of the great Shriners Hospitals network is supervised by the members of the Board of Trustees, who
are elected at the annual meeting of the hospital corporation. Each hospital operates under the supervision of
a local Board of Governors, a chief of staff and an administrator. Members of the boards are Shriners, who serve
without pay.
The network of orthopaedic hospitals grew as follows: Shreveport, Sept. 16, 1922; Honolulu, Jan. 2, 1923; Twin
Cities, March 12, 1923; San Francisco, June 16, 1923 (relocated to Sacramento in 1997); Portland, Jan. 15, 1924;
St. Louis, April 8, 1924; Spokane, Nov. 15, 1924; Salt Lake City, Jan. 22, 1925; Montreal, Feb. 18, 1925; Springfield,
Feb. 21, 1925; Chicago, March 20, 1926; Philadelphia, June 24, 1926; Lexington, Nov. 1, 1926; Greenville, Sept.
1, 1927; Mexico City, March 10, 1945; Houston, Feb. 1, 1952; Los Angeles, Feb. 25, 1952; Winnipeg, March 16, 1952
(closed Aug. 12, 1977); Erie, April 1, 1967; Tampa, Oct. 16, 1985, and Sacramento, Calif., April 14, 1997. This
newest Shriners Hospital is the only one in the Shrine system that provides orthopaedic, burn and spinal cord injury
care, and conducts research, all in a single facility.
The first patient to be admitted in 1922 was a little girl from the red clay country south of Shreveport, La.,
a tot with a club foot who had learned to walk on the top of her foot rather than the sole. The first child to
be admitted in Minneapolis was a Blackfoot Indian boy suffering from the deformities of polio. Since that time,
more than 600,000 children have been treated at the 22 Shriners Hospitals. Surgical techniques developed in Shriners
Hospitals have become standard in the orthopaedic world. Thousands of children have been fitted with arm and leg
braces and artificial limbs, most of them made in special labs in the hospitals by expert technicians.
Orthopaedic Research
From 1950 to 1960, the Shrine's funds for helping children increased rapidly. At the same time, the waiting
lists of new patients for admission to Shriners Hospitals began to decline, due to the polio vaccine and new antibiotics.
Thus, Shriners found themselves able to provide additional services, and Shrine leaders began to look for other
ways they could help the children of North America.
One result was the collating of the medical records of patients of Shriners Hospitals. By placing the records
of each patient and treatment on computer and microfilm, valuable information was made available to all Shrine
surgeons and the medical world as a whole. This process, begun in 1959, also made it easier to initiate clinical
research in Shrine orthopaedic hospitals.
Shriners Hospitals had always engaged in clinical research, and in the early '60s, the Shrine aggressively entered
the structured research field and began earmarking funds for research projects. By 1967, Shriners were spending
$20,000 on orthopaedic research. Today, the annual research budget totals approximately $25 million. Shrine researchers
are working on a vast variety of projects, including studies of bone and joint diseases, such as juvenile rheumatoid
arthritis; increasing basic knowledge of the structure and function of connective tissue; and refining functional
electrical stimulation, which is enabling children with spinal cord injuries to have limited use of their arms
and legs.
Entering the burn care field
This expansion of orthopaedic work was not enough for the Shriners. They had enough funds to further expand
their philanthropy. The only question was — What unmet need could they fill?
A special committee was established to explore areas of need and found that burn treatment was a field of service
that was being bypassed. In the early '60s, the only burn treatment center in the United States was part of a military
complex. The committee was ready with a resolution for the 1962 Imperial Session in Toronto. This read in part:
"WHEREAS, reliable medical surveys disclose that each year thousands of children are rendered actually
or potentially crippled by burns; and
"WHEREAS, the facilities in North America for research, treatment and care of such burns are inadequate
and limited; and
"WHEREAS, the Shrine, as a leader of child therapy in the field of orthopaedics, can again make a contribution
to medical science;
"Now therefore, be it resolved, that Shriners Hospitals for Crippled Children, a Colorado Corporation,
do construct, establish, and operate one or more hospitals for the care and treatment of curable crippled children
afflicted with acutely dangerous burns, and for research, activities, and training programs related thereto, at
such place or places in North America as the Board of Trustees of the Shriners Hospitals for Crippled Children
may determine, at an aggregate cost not to exceed ten million dollars;
"And, be it further resolved, that the Board of Trustees be directed to proceed forthwith to cause the
first proposed hospitals to be built and put in operation."
The resolution, dated July 4, 1962, was adopted by unanimous vote.

On November 1, 1963, the Shrine opened a seven-bed wing in the John Sealy Hospital on the University of Texas
Medical Branch in Galveston as an interim center for the care of severe burns in children. On February 1, 1964,
the Shrine opened a seven-bed ward in the Cincinnati General Hospital on the campus of the University of Cincinnati.
A third interim operation, a five-bed ward, was opened March 13, 1964, in the Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston)
under the direction of the Harvard Medical School.
While children were being treated in these wards, separate buildings were constructed near each interim location.
These buildings, three 30-bed pediatric burn hospitals, were designed to meet the special needs of burned children.
At each, the staffs remain affiliated with their neighboring universities so that they may better carry out their
three-fold programs of treatment, research and teaching.
The hospital in Galveston opened March 20, 1966; the hospital in Cincinnati opened February 19, 1968; and the
Boston hospital opened November 2, 1968. New facilities would be constructed for all three burn hospitals in the
1990s. The new Cincinnati and Galveston hospitals were completed in 1992, and the new facility for the burn hospital
in Boston was completed in 1999.
A new burn treatment center opened in 1997 in the new Shriners Hospital in Sacramento, Calif. This newest Shriners
Hospital provides orthopaedic, burn and spinal cord injury care, and serves as the Shrine's primary burn treatment
center in the western United States. The Northern California Hospital also conducts research into all three disciplines.
Since the Shriners opened their burn hospitals in the 1960s, a burned child's chance of survival has more than
doubled. They have saved children burned over 90 percent of their bodies. The techniques they have pioneered to
prevent the crippling effects of severe burns have made a normal life possible for thousands of burn victims.
Most importantly, perhaps, the establishment of the burn Shriners Hospitals has alerted the medical world to
this special need which has, in turn, led to the establishment of non-Shrine burn centers throughout North America.
At Shriners Hospitals the work goes on, continually searching for new ways to heal severe burns and reduce or,
as much as possible, eliminate the crippling and scarring effects of those burns. Because of the special nature
of the burn hospitals, they will surely always be on the frontier of burn care.
Continuing the commitment
During the 1980s, Shriners Hospitals initiated a number of new programs in their efforts to continue providing
high-quality pediatric orthopaedic and burn care. One of the most significant was the 1980 opening of the spinal
cord injury rehabilitation unit at the Shriners Hospital in Philadelphia — the first spinal cord injury unit in
the United States designed specifically for children and teenagers who suffer from these injuries.

By 1984, two additional spinal cord injury units were operating in the Shriners Hospitals in Chicago and San
Francisco. In 1997, the San Francisco Hospital, including the SCI unit, was relocated to the newest Shriners Hospital
in Sacramento, Calif.
At the Shrine's SCI units, children receive long-term rehabilitative care and physical and occupational therapy
to help them relearn the basic skills of everyday life. Counseling sessions help patients learn to cope with the
emotional aspects of their injury and help them lead fulfilling lives by emphasizing the abilities they still have.
Patients may enter an SCI unit apprehensive about the future, but after months of encouragement and support, they
often leave with a sense of hope and optimism.
Another important undertaking that was begun during the 1980s was an aggressive rebuilding and renovation program,
involving the construction of new facilities and extensive renovations throughout the Shriners Hospital system.
In 1981, the Representatives at the 107th Imperial Council Session approved a major expansion and reconstruction
program, which included the construction of a new orthopaedic hospital in Tampa, Fla. The opening of the Tampa
Hospital in 1985 — the first new hospital added to the Shrine system since the 1960s — brought the Shriners Hospital
system back to 22 hospitals. Since 1981, 21 Shriners Hospitals have either been rebuilt or totally renovated, with
the burn hospital in Boston being completed in 1999. In 1998, the Joint Boards decided to build a new facility
for the Mexico City Hospital, which had undergone extensive renovations in 1989.
In 1989, another significant decision was made when the Shriners voted to construct a new hospital in the Northern
California region, to replace the existing San Francisco Hospital. This flagship facility would provide orthopaedic,
burn and spinal cord injury care, and conduct research. It would be the first in the Shriners' network to provide
all these disciplines in a single facility. It would also serve as the Shrine's primary burn center in the west,
reducing the need for severely burned children to travel across the country to receive care at one of the other
burn Shriners Hospitals. In 1990, Sacramento was chosen as the site for the new hospital. Construction began in
1993, and in 1997, the new Northern California Hospital in Sacramento opened its doors.
Also during the 1980s, because of the high number of patients with myelodysplasia (spina bifida), many of the
Shriners Hospitals developed special programs to provide comprehensive, multidisciplinary care to these patients.
Previously, Shriners Hospitals had provided the orthopaedic care these children needed, but in 1986, the Joint
Boards of Directors and Trustees approved a policy permitting the hospitals to address the multiple needs of these
children by providing their medical, neurosurgical and urological requirements, as well as their psychosocial,
nutritional and recreational needs. Though the orthopaedic problems of these patients are usually the most overt
feature of this congenital spinal defect, the accompanying neurological and urological problems are more life threatening,
and they often take precedence over orthopaedic treatment.

Shriners Hospitals expanded their prosthetic services during the 1980s with regional prosthetic research programs
at two hospitals. In 1987, the Los Angeles Hospital adopted the West Coast Child Amputee Prosthetics Project (CAPP),
which provides prostheses and rehabilitation for limb-deficient children and also conducts research into prosthetic
design and fabrication. In 1988, the Springfield Hospital received approval to create a Regional Center for Prosthetic
Research to explore the development of new, more advanced prosthetic devices for children. These two programs,
in conjunction with the prosthetic and orthotic labs throughout the Shriners Hospital system, will ensure that
Shriners Hospitals remain leaders in the field of children's orthotics and prosthetics.
The burn hospitals also took steps to ensure that burn patients continue to receive the most advanced burn treatment
available. The Shriners Hospital in Cincinnati initiated a burns air ambulance, the first air ambulance in the
country devoted exclusively to transporting burn victims. The burn hospitals also developed a re-entry program
to assist burn patients in their return home after being discharged from the hospital. During 1992, new replacement
facilities for the Cincinnati and Galveston burn hospitals were dedicated, and groundbreaking ceremonies were held
for a new facility for the Boston Hospital. All the burn hospitals are continuing to conduct research in their
ongoing efforts to improve care for burned patients.

In 1996, Shrine Representatives took another significant step when they voted to officially change the name
of their official philanthropy to "Shriners Hospitals for Children." In a move that permanently eliminates
the word "crippled" from the organization's corporate name, the Representatives made the change in an
effort to have the name better reflect the mission of Shriners Hospitals and the expansions of services that have
been added over the years, including the opening of the burn hospitals and the addition of programs of comprehensive
care for children with myelodysplasia.
The new name is intended to reflect the philosophy of Shriners Hospitals, which provide medical care for children
totally free of charge, based only on what's best for the child. The new name, likewise, does not label children
in any way, but simply recognizes them for what they are: children. Though they have a new name, Shriners Hospitals
continue to focus on their mission of helping children lead better lives.
As they look to the future, the Joint Boards are committed to maintaining Shriners Hospitals for Children as
leaders in children's pediatric orthopaedic and burn care.
The fraternity flourishes
As the hospital network grew, the fraternity continued in its grand tradition. In 1923, there was a Shriner
in the White House, and Noble/President William G. Harding reviewed the Shriners parade at the 1923 Imperial Session
in Washington, D.C.
The East-West Shrine Game
The East-West Shrine College All-Star Football Game was established in 1925 in San Francisco with the motto
"Strong Legs Run So Weak Legs May Walk." Throughout its history, this traditional post-season game has
raised millions of dollars for Shriners Hospitals and helped millions of people become more familiar with the story
of Shriners Hospitals. In this, as in other Shrine football games, the young players visit patients at Shriners
Hospitals, so that the players themselves know the real purpose of the game.
The Peace Memorial
In 1930, the Imperial Session was to be held in Toronto. For his Session, Imperial Potentate Leo V. Youngworth
wanted something special. With the appropriate approval, the leader of 600,000 Shriners commissioned a peace monument
to be built in Toronto. It was to face south, commemorating 150 years of friendship between the United States and
Canada.
The Peace Memorial was relocated and rededicated during the 1962 Imperial Session, and it stands today outside
the National Exposition grounds in Toronto. When the Shriners returned to Toronto in 1989 for the 115th Imperial
Council Session, the memorial was again rededicated, representing a renewed commitment to the Shrine's international
brotherhood and fraternalism. The plaque reads: "Erected and dedicated to the cause of universal peace by
the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine for North America June 12, 1930."
The 1930 Session was the Shrine's own antidote to the pervasive gloom of the Great Depression. But it was only
temporary. Not even Shriners could escape the Depression. For the first time in its history, the Shrine began to
lose members — the Nobles just could not pay their dues.
The struggle to keep the hospitals and the fraternity going during these years was enormous. It was necessary
to dip into the Endowment Fund capital to cover operating costs of the hospitals. To ensure the financial distinction
between the hospitals and the fraternity, a corporation for each was established in 1937.
The Shrine and its hospitals somehow survived the Depression. In the 1940s, like the rest of North America,
the Shrine adjusted to wartime existence. Imperial Sessions were limited to business and were attended only by
official Temple Representatives. Shrine parade units stayed home and marched in local patriotic parades. During
the four years of war, more than $1 billion was invested by and through the Shrine in government war bonds. The
hospital corporation also invested all of its available funds in government securities. After World War II, the
economy improved, and men found renewed interest in fraternalism. By 1942, membership was once more increasing.
Shrine Rooms East and West
Alfred G. Arvold (El Zagal Temple, Fargo, N.D.), 1944-45 Imperial Potentate, became the only Shrine head in
history who had no Imperial Session over which to preside. Only national Shrine officers and hospital trustees
gathered in Chicago in 1945. Arvold made an impact nevertheless. He initiated, designed and made real his personal
dream of special display rooms in the George Washington National Masonic
Memorial in Alexandria, Va. Millions of visitors have since been to those Memorial Shrine Rooms — now called
Shrine Rooms East — which were refurbished in 1963.
In 1972, a new Shrine museum — International Shrine Rooms West — was established in the north wing of what had
been the first San Francisco Shriners Hospital. In 1996, in anticipation of the closing of the San Francisco Shriners
Hospital in 1997, Shrine Rooms West was closed and much of its key memorabilia was relocated to the Memorabilia
Room at Shriners International Headquarters in Tampa.
Shrine General Offices
Until 1928, the Shrine's national offices were in Richmond, Va. With the growth of the fraternity, there were
increasing pressures to locate Shrine headquarters in some city that would be more convenient to all Temples. Thus,
in 1958, the building at 323 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, was purchased. At a special session held April 10th,
1978, in Tampa, Fla., Representatives voted to relocate Shrine Headquarters to 2900 Rocky Point Drive in Tampa,
Florida. The Tampa headquarters houses the administrative personnel for both the Iowa (fraternal) and Colorado
(Shriners Hospitals) corporations, fraternal and hospital records, the attorneys who monitor the many estates involved
in Shriners Hospitals for Children, and the various other departments that support the day-to-day operations of
the Shrine fraternity and Shriners Hospitals for Children.
Within a few years, however, it became apparent that additional space would be needed at headquarters, and an
expansion project was begun in 1987 to meet the ever-expanding needs of the Shrine and Shriners Hospitals. A third
wing, or pod, was added to the rear of the existing building, and the board room and executive offices for the
fraternity and hospital system were relocated to the new area, allowing several departments to expand their offices
in the original sections. The new, enlarged board room provides the necessary space for meetings of the Joint Boards
and their committees, and for conferences involving personnel from Shriners Hospitals. In the late 1990s, the two
original pods in front were expanded to provide additional office space for the growing staff, with a new look
created for the front exterior of the building.
Today, the Shriners International Headquarters building, located on a busy causeway crossing Tampa Bay, continues
to be one of the most recognizable structures in the area. With the "Editorial Without Words" statue
standing prominently out front, it serves as a familiar landmark for the many motorists who cross the causeway
each day.
The Shrine of North America — How the organization works
Shrine Temples are located throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico and the Republic of Panama, with Shrine
Clubs around the world. There is, therefore, a special Shrine Pledge of Allegiance: "I pledge allegiance to
my flag, and to the country for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for
all." Wherever Shriners gather, the national flags of the United States, Canada, Mexico and the Republic of
Panama are flown.

Today, there are approximately 500,000 Shriners who belong to 191 Shrine Temples, or chapters, from Al Aska
Temple in Anchorage, Alaska, to Abou Saad Temple in Panama, and from Aloha Temple in Honolulu to Philae Temple
in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Temple memberships range from approximately 10,000 (Murat Temple in Indianapolis) to about
600 (Mazol Temple in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada).
The Temples, their units and affiliated Shrine Clubs embody the true spirit of fraternalism, and wherever a
Shriner goes, he can be certain there are Nobles who will extend their hand in greeting and call him "brother."
To better understand how all this works, an observer can start at a local Temple. All Temples are run by an
elected Divan (officers), headed by the Potentate and the Chief Rabban. A Recorder, or record keeper/administrator,
usually maintains an office at the Temple. One member is elected or appointed to the "lowest rung" each
January and under traditional practice moves up one "rung" each year. Thus, by the time he becomes Potentate
of his Temple, a Shriner usually has at least four years of experience in Temple leadership.

Stated meetings of the Temple membership as a whole must be held at least four times a year. In addition, each
Temple holds one or more ceremonials every year for the induction of new members. There are also many Temple, unit,
and Shrine Club social events each year.
Units are smaller groups within a Temple which are organized for a specific purpose. Many of these are the uniformed
units so familiar to parade watchers: Oriental bands, Shrine bands, horse and motor patrols, Highlander units,
clowns, drum corps, chanters, and Legions of Honor. Other Temple units can include hospital hosts or guides, and
transportation units which work closely with their local Shriners Hospital — either with the children at the hospital
or in transporting patients to and from the hospital.
Each Temple has a clearly defined territory from which it can obtain new members. Since these jurisdictions
are often quite large, smaller geographical units may be organized for fellowship purposes. These are the Shrine
Clubs, under the control of their mother Temple.
In addition, any number of Temples may form a Shrine Association for social conventions, if the Imperial Council
issues an appropriate charter. There are currently 20 regional associations and 19 Shrine unit associations.
The 191 Shrine Temples are governed by the Imperial Council, which is composed of Representatives. The Representatives
of the Imperial Council include all past and present Imperial Officers, Emeritus Representatives (who have served
15 years or more), and Representatives elected from each Temple. A Temple may have two Representatives if its membership
exceeds 300, three if more than 600, and four if more than 1,000. These Representatives meet once a year — usually
in July at the Imperial Council Session — to make policy decisions and legislation regarding both the fraternity
and the hospitals. With nearly 900 Representatives, the Imperial Council constitutes one of the largest legislative
bodies in the world. The Representatives also elect the Imperial Officers and the Chairman and members of the Board
of Trustees for Shriners Hospitals for Children.
The Imperial Divan, the Shrine's governing body, consists of 13 officers plus an Imperial Chaplain. The Imperial
Treasurer and the Imperial Recorder may be elected for several consecutive years; they are the only officers receiving
any type of compensation. As with Temple Divans, an officer (with the exception of Treasurer and Recorder) is elected
to the bottom of the Divan and, barring unforeseen circumstances, moves up one position each year. These officers,
elected from among the Representatives, are usually past Temple Potentates. The Divan plus the immediate Past Imperial
Potentate constitute the Board of Directors of the fraternal corporation and they, with the chairman of the Board
of Trustees, constitute the Board of Directors of the hospital corporation.
The chief executive officer for the Shrine of North America is the Imperial Potentate, who is elected for one
year. He visits many of the Shrine Temples and hospitals and generally supervises both fraternal and hospital policy.
To help him with these tasks, the Imperial Potentate appoints committees to implement the various Shrine programs.
One of the most important of these committees is the Endowments, Wills and Gifts Committee, which coordinates and
supervises contributions and bequests given to Shriners Hospitals for Children.
The day-to-day operations — keeping the records and accounts of the fraternity and hospitals, supervising the
estates left to Shriners Hospitals and producing printed materials for the entire Shrine organization — are carried
out in the General Offices in Tampa. These offices are supervised by an Executive Vice President for Fraternal
Affairs, an Executive Vice President of Shriners Hospitals, and a legal department, which is under the supervision
of an appointed General Counsel.
However complex the Shrine may seem, its essence is the fraternal fellowship for which it was originally founded.
It has been said that there are no strangers in Shrinedom. This is evident in the great times and laughter wherever
Shriners get together, whether in a local Shrine Club meeting, a Temple ceremonial, a Shrine Association gathering
or an Imperial Session. All Shriners share not just a Masonic background but a zest for living.
Though this quality remains consistent — from the original 13 members to the hundreds of thousands of Shriners
today — the Shrine has adapted to many changes. Many more Temple and convention activities include the families
of Shriners. Today, many Shriners are deeply involved in Shriners Hospital work in addition to their fraternal
activities.
Most Shrine Temples sponsor fund-raising events to provide funds for Shriners Hospitals. In one calendar year
there can be nearly 500 of these events, which range from the East/West Shrine Game and other football games to
horse shows, hospital paper sales, and miscellaneous sports and social events.
During the 1980s, Shriners Hospitals experienced the greatest expansion in their history, with major building
programs, increasing numbers of patients receiving care, and expansion of services. As the new millennium approaches,
all 22 Shriners Hospitals are maintaining their position at the forefront of specialized pediatric orthopaedic
and burn care. The Joint Boards plan to continue updating their facilities, expanding their research programs and
increasing their ability to meet the needs of thousands of children in need of expert orthopaedic and burn care.
In this way, Shriners Hospitals will continue to meet a special need for children.
Thus, whatever changes occur within the fraternal organization or within the Shriners Hospital system, the Shrine
of North America will remain the "World's Greatest Fraternity," operating and maintaining the "World's
Greatest Philanthropy."
Es Selamu Aleikum.
This information was compiled from the Shrine of North America
Website and is provided for your enjoyment and education.
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