The Guild of the Chicago History Museum

The Guild of the Chicago History Museum Founded as a women's board in 1948, the Guild supports a variety of the Chicago History Museum’s needs and provides funding for many major projects. Joseph M.

HISTORY OF THE GUILD

The Chicago Historical Society was founded in 1856, nineteen years after Chicago was incorporated as a city, and is Chicago’s oldest cultural institution. More than 150 years later, the Chicago History Museum continues its role as a major urban history center committed to serving its many visitors with exhibitions, programs and publications that educate and respond to their v

aried needs and interests. In 1948, the Board of Trustees of the Chicago Historical Society voted to establish a women’s committee for the Museum. Board member Jean Morton Cudahy (Mrs. Cudahy, Jr.) convened a meeting of civic leaders at her home on December 10, 1948. This meeting became the inception of the support group now known as The Guild of the Chicago Historical Society. The Chicago Historical Society’s director, Paul M. Angle, outlined the purposes of The Guild to be as follows:

“To further public interest in the Chicago Historical Society and to encourage and promote the general activities of the Society; to create a friendly atmosphere for special events; to assist in entertaining distinguished visitors at the Museum or in private houses.” Gary T. Johnson, the current president, says “The Guild always has been the Museum’s best friend.”

At the urging of Mrs. Philip K. Wrigley, The Guild established the Council of Costume Associates in April 1974 for members and non-members of The Guild whose interests focused primarily on the Society’s costume collection. The Guild is committed to assisting with a variety of the Chicago History Museum’s needs and provides funding for many major projects. From 1967 to 1975, it contributed over $50,000 to the campaign to build a new wing for the Museum. In a modernization project launched in 1985, The Guild raised over one million dollars, making it the largest support group donor to the campaign. To honor this achievement, the original 1932 Georgian-style building was dedicated to The Guild. The Guild continues to focus on promoting greater interest in the Chicago History Museum’s programs and exhibitions. The Guild Exhibition Development Fund, established in 1997, helps to fund groundbreaking exhibitions at the Museum. Guild funds have also supported the Digital Photography Studio and the Museum’s Card Catalogue Conversion Project. In 2008, The Guild completed a pledge of a quarter of a million dollars to underwrite Chicago: Crossroads of America - the catalogue for the new Chicago History Galleries that were installed in conjunction with the Museum’s 150th Anniversary and the major renovation that took place at the time. In 2010, The Guild completed another $250,000 campaign for the design and renovation of the North & Clark Café Complex and The Guild Room. The Guild continues to be a major underwriter for a number of important initiatives, including Big Picture, an exhibition of paintings in Chicago, the creation of the Lincoln Bicentennial Teen Council in honor of the 2009 Year of Lincoln, and the Great Fire web application. As a leader among women’s boards in the city of Chicago, in May 2012 The Guild hosted an historic luncheon for 18 women’s boards serving Chicago’s cultural community. A plaque commemorating this historic event is on permanent display in The Guild Room. A dynamic group of over 350 women, The Guild today continues to provide strong support to the Chicago History Museum as it pursues its educational mission.

In celebration of America’s 250th Year of Independence, the Guild of the Chicago History Museum is proud to sponsor a re...
05/28/2026

In celebration of America’s 250th Year of Independence, the Guild of the Chicago History Museum is proud to sponsor a refresh of its Facing Freedom exhibit. This exhibition uses images, artifacts, and interactive elements to explore eight familiar and not-so-familiar stories in Chicago’s and the nation’s past and asks the question: “What can we do for freedom?” Facing Freedom will open to great fanfare on America’s Birthday, July 4, 2026!

To honor this momentous birthday and in eager anticipation of the exhibit opening, the Guild is hosting, “A Celebration of Liberty” at the museum. Highlighting the evening are Sarah Botstein, executive producer of Ken Burns’ The American Revolution (well worth a watch) who will sit in conversation with writer and producer, Geoffrey Baer.

Friday, June, 19, 2026 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. To order tickets, contact [email protected]

Benefit Co-Chairs Connie Barkley and Erica Meyer promise that “A Celebration of Liberty” will be a very special evening.

Cocktail Attire - Revolutionary garb Optional

Outgoing president Jill Kirk was honored by the Guild Board for her four years of  dedicated and inspiring leadership. S...
05/21/2026

Outgoing president Jill Kirk was honored by the Guild Board for her four years of dedicated and inspiring leadership. She was presented with a decorative pin and a copy of The Arts and Crafts Movement by Board member Darcy Evon.

05/07/2026

Please join the Guild for its Annual Meeting on Tuesday, May 19, 2026 at the Chicago History Museum beginning promptly at 11 a.m. Guild Members are asked to arrive by 10:30 a.m. It’s always a pleasure to be inside the museum, to learn something new about Chicago history and to mix and mingle with intellectually engaging women.

Following the annual meeting beginning at 11:30 a.m. Liesl Olson, Director of the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum and Professor of Art History and Museum Studies at the University of Illinois Chicago will speak on the life and legacy of Jane Addams and her contributions to social reform in Chicago. This presentation should be a particularly interesting follow-up for those members who joined the Book Club group last November when we discussed Jane Addams: Spirit in Action by Louise W. Knight.

Lunch will be served at 12:30 p.m.
Guild member’s guests are encouraged to arrive in time for the 11:30 a.m. presentation and then stay for lunch.

Guild Members: Please be sure to Share this post with your friends.

Guild members recently enjoyed a guided pop-up tour of the impressive intuit Art Museum. Located in Chicago’s West Town ...
04/18/2026

Guild members recently enjoyed a guided pop-up tour of the impressive intuit Art Museum. Located in Chicago’s West Town neighborhood, the museum is a premier venue of self-taught art and exhibits the work by artists who typically work outside the mainstream and have developed a sustained artistic practice.

04/02/2026

Please join the Guild for a Pop-Up event on Friday, April 17 at the Intuit Art Museum in West Town, 756 N. Milwaukee from 10:00 a.m.to 12 noon. If this is your first introduction to Intuit, you are in for a treat. The museum showcases innovative self-taught artists working in varied media without the constraints of more traditional art school parameters.

Its website states, “Chicago is recognized as one of the first places in the nation to embrace self-taught art as a legitimate genre, ultimately leading to Intuit being formed in 1991 by a group of artists, collectors, art dealers and art enthusiasts devoted to outsider art.”

Indeed, Intuit’s existence highlights Chicago at the forefront of art history.

Please register to attend and bring a friend. The cost is $35 and includes admission, coffee and light snacks.

Guild Members: Please be sure to Share this post with your friends…

On March 10th, the Guild partnered with the International Women’s Forum  to celebrate Women’s History Month with a prese...
03/31/2026

On March 10th, the Guild partnered with the International Women’s Forum to celebrate Women’s History Month with a presentation by Elena Gonzales, Museum Curator of Civic Engagement and Social Justice. Elena shared her journey to make the current “Women of Aqui en Chicago” exhibition a reality.

03/17/2026

The Guild Book Club will once again gather in the CHS Guild Room to discuss An Unfinished Love Story by Doris Kearns Goodwin on Tuesday, March 24 at 12 noon. Doris Kearns Goodwin is a notable biographer and historian who has a wealth of knowledge about the US government and its presidents. This book is a biography of her life with her husband during the 1960s peppered with political intrigue of the day. She is recognized as a particularly gifted “story teller” so this book is sure to please.

All Guild members are encouraged to gather, socialize and enjoy discussion over lunch. Please feel free to invite a friend.

For your planning the book club will next meet at CHM on Tuesday, May 5 in the Guild Room at Noon to discuss Abigal Adams by Woody Holton.

Again, you won’t be disappointed if you join the group for a bit of intellectual conversation and lunch bunch fun!

Guild Members: Please be sure to Share this post with your friends…

Member Vicki Granacki  recently opened her home for a Guild pop-up tour of her fabulous contemporary art collection. Vic...
02/27/2026

Member Vicki Granacki recently opened her home for a Guild pop-up tour of her fabulous contemporary art collection. Vicki shared interesting anecdotes about how she and her late husband, Lee, acquired the more than 150 works of art from prominent Chicago artists. With Vicki is Guild Board member, Darcy Evon, right.

02/19/2026

The Guild’s next event is a Pop-Up on Tuesday morning, February 24 at the home of Guild member Vicki Granacki. She is graciously opening her home and hosting the Guild to explore the Wesley-Granacki Art Collection. This collection features many works by Chicago's Hairy Who and Imagists. A light lunch will follow.

The Guild Book Club will discuss An Unfinished Love Story by Doris  Kearns Goodwin on Tuesday, March 24 in the Guild Roo...
02/06/2026

The Guild Book Club will discuss An Unfinished Love Story by Doris Kearns Goodwin on Tuesday, March 24 in the Guild Room at 12 noon. Guests are welcome.

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1601 N Clark Street
Chicago, IL
60614

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