In 1870, there were several thousand
Freemasons in
Manhattan, many of whom lunched at the Knickerbocker Cottage at a special table on the second floor. There, the idea of a new fraternity for Masons, stressing fun and fellowship, was discussed. Together,
Walter M. Fleming and
William J. Florence established a separate fellowship to fulfill those ideals. While on tour in
Marseille, Florence, an actor, was invited to a party given by an
Arab diplomat. The entertainment was a musical comedy. At its conclusion, the guests became members of a secret society. Florence took notes and drawings at his initial viewing and on two other occasions, once in
Algiers and once in
Cairo. When he returned to
New York in 1870, he showed his material to Fleming. Fleming created the ritual, emblem and costumes. Florence and Fleming were initiated August 13, 1870, and they initiated 11 men on June 16, 1871. The group adopted a
Middle Eastern theme and soon established Temple, although the term Temple has now been replaced by
Shrine Auditorium or Shrine Center. The first Temple established was Mecca Temple, established at the
New York City Masonic Hall on September 26, 1872. Fleming was the first potentate. In 1875, there were 43 Shriners in the organization. To encourage membership, the Imperial Grand Council of the Ancient Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine for North America was created at the June 6, 1876 meeting of Mecca Temple. Fleming was elected the first imperial potentate. By 1878, there were 425 members in 13 temples in eight states, and by 1888, there were 7,210 members in 48 temples in the United States and Canada. By the Imperial Session held in Washington, D.C., in 1900, there were 55,000 members and 82 Temples.
Prince Hall Shrinedom Historically, the Shrine was open to only White men. In 1893, an African American counterpart to the Shriners movement was initiated by John G. Jones and 13 other
Prince Hall masons, known as the "Imperial Grand Council of Prince Hall Shriners, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles Mystic Shrine" (A.A.O.N.M.S.). In 1900, the name was changed to the "Ancient Egyptian Arabic Order Nobles Mystic Shrine of North and South America and its Jurisdiction, Incorporate" (A.E.A.O.N.M.S). Beginning in 1919, there were legal conflicts between the White and African American orders, with a White only order from Texas filing a lawsuit against a local African American order for infringement of White Shriners regalia and traditions. The White order was initially successful in quashing the predominantly African American temple until the ruling was overturned in appeals in 1929; protecting the right of the African American Prince Hall Shriners to continue calling themselves Shriners; using its emblems; practicing its rituals; and fundraising nationwide. The Worldwide Fraternal Shrine Family is headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee, and counts 25,000 members in 270 shrines; with its own women's auxiliary organizations. Their primary recipients of charitable donations are the Legal Defense Fund, the
NAACP, the
National Urban League,
the UNCF, and various hospitals and universities.
Syria Mosque In 1911, the
Syria Mosque was completed in
Pittsburgh and inaugurated in 1916. This 3,700-seat performance venue, originally for Shriners, later became significant as the "birthplace of network television". An example of
Exotic Revival architecture, it was never used as a mosque but featured religious Arabic iconography and inscriptions, partly based on the
Alhambra. Architect Gulzar Haider was "fascinated" by its design, but criticized the "insensitive and callous misuse of another religion’s artistic vocabulary and symbolic grammar," claiming it was part of the "'oriental obsession' of the otherwise '
puritanical' Europeans and Americans".
Women's auxiliaries The Ladies Oriental Shrine of North America was founded in 1903 in
Wheeling, West Virginia, and the Daughters of the Nile was founded in 1913 in
Seattle, Washington. Both are for women only and they support the Shriners Hospitals and promote sociability. Membership in either organization is open to any woman 18 years of age and older who is related to a Shriner or Master Mason by birth or marriage. The latter organization has local branches called "Temples," and there were ten of these in 1922. Among the famous members of the Daughters of the Nile was
First Lady Florence Harding, wife of
Warren G. Harding.
Growth By 1938 there were about 340,000 members in the United States. That year,
Life published photographs of the Shriners' rites. It described the Shriners as being the first in prestige, wealth and show among secret societies, and that Shriners organizations typically include a town's most prominent citizens.
Organizational rebranding In 2002, following the
September 11 attacks, the "faux-Middle Eastern practices and trappings" led Shriners to be "mistaken for a Muslim organization, leading to harassment and vandalism". This included threatening phone calls and harassment of Rhode Island Shriners (formerly known as Palestine Temple Shriners) driving a Shriners van to transport sick children to Shriner hospitals. This was in continued response to "the events of Sept. 11, 2001 and subsequent military conflicts". Changes included renaming the organization from "Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine" to "Shriners International;" renaming the "Arabic Patrol" to "The Patrol" and removing the word Syria from Syria Shriners vanity plates. Despite these changes, the Illustrious Potentate of Pittsburgh's Syria Shrine chapter stated that "pretty much all non-atheists are welcome, including Muslims". ==Membership==