This document contains the two appendixes (approx. 6,900 words) from For Members Only for those who just want the current club guide.Appendix A: The Club GuideInfo on Chicago's top private clubs, including: Name, address, phone, website, founding date, famous members, mission/motto, members, dominant professions of members, joining procedures, initiation fees, dues, collection highlights, meeting facilities, athletic facilities, club activities, guest facilities, average age of membership, annual events, year non-whites first admitted, non-whites as percent of total membership, year women first admitted, women as percent of total membership, and more.Appendix B: The ABCs of Membership: A GlossaryChicago's Private Clubs: A Rich and Unexpected HistoryThere wouldn't be a Burnham Plan. The World's Columbian Exposition wouldn't be in our history books. Al Capone might have lived out his days with a comfortable grasp on Chicago's crime rackets. . . . The 2000 moratorium on the death penalty in Illinois might not have had the support it did, and Millennium Park might still be merely a grand idea instead of the showpiece it is today.As Lisa Holton writes in her introduction, Chicago would be a very different place without the contributions made by the members of the city's private social clubs. Yet most of us walk past their stately facades without any idea what goes on within. Holton, a freelance writer and former business editor of the Chicago Sun-Times, reveals a fascinating history of the hidden world that has united--and divided--the city's leaders since Chicago's first days.These clubs have been oases for the rich and privileged, playgrounds for the social set, private watering holes for the city's movers and shakers. Places that, certainly at their inception, most of us couldn't get in.Here's your chance to enter that world, to see how the business, nonprofit, and political leaders of Chicago shaped the city for more than 140 years behind these closed doors. With chapters devoted to the city's top clubs and a guide to current membership requirements, explore the past, present, and future of these elite communities. Learn how clubs that flourished in the days of Marshall Field and Louis Sullivan, enclaves once restricted by race, sex, and birthright, have adapted to a modern society. Whether you're a prospective member or a student of Chicago history, For Members Only is the first comprehensive book consolidating the histories of these current and former landmark clubs in words, pictures, and first-person commentary.