The club derived its name from the Kingston Mines Theatre Company founded by June Pyskacek in 1969 at 2356 N. Lincoln Avenue and named after
Kingston Mines, Illinois, where the father of one of its actors, Jack Wallace, worked. Pyskacek asked Harry Hoch and a partner to open a café and performance space in the front of the building called the Kingston Mines Company Store. The company was acquired in 1972 by Lenin "Doc" Pellegrino,
M.D., and renamed the Kingston Mines Café. The original production of
Grease was written and first premiered at the Kingston Mines Theatre in 1971 before moving to
Broadway a year later. The theatre company expired in 1973, while the Café survived as a blues club. It moved to its current location at 2548 N. Halsted in 1982. After Doc Pelligrino died in 2018, he passed ownership to his daughters, Donna and Lisa Pellegrino. Fans donated over $60,000 to a
GoFundMe to help the club reopen. Before the pandemic, Kingston Mines showcased a variety of blues by two separate bands, every night year-round, on two stages. Kingston Mines is still owned by the Pellegrino family and it is "the oldest, continuously operating blues club in Chicago." Doc Pellegrino's motto was: "Hear Blues. Drink Booze. Talk Loud. You're Among Friends." == Blues ==