The 1,350-square-foot
pub has a 12-foot ceiling that is decked out in its original tin
ceiling plates. Other period pieces include an 80-year-old back
bar mirror from Chicago, and an 80-year-old glass and oak display
cooler from Virginia.
“We designed the pub around these pieces,”
Lehnen said. “We built the bar piece so it looks like it’s
been here a while—white oak with burl maple inlay.”
To bring the pub into the 21st century, Lehnen added
a large screen TV and three smaller TVs. Patrons can enjoy one of
the several European or American Craft beers on tap, or one of the
high-end wines and bottled beers. Sandwiches, wraps, panninis, salads,
and soups are on the menu.
Prohibition -- the dark, 13-year-period when alcohol was outlawed
in the U.S. -- is an oddly fascinating piece of American history.
In the heyday of speakeasies, gangsters ran amok and crooked cops
were glamorous in a Hollywood revisionist kind of way. Stages were
set for elaborate smuggling rings, underground jazz clubs with secret
handshakes and warehouse raids. No wonder so many girls dress up
as flappers on Halloween.
This intrigue explains the attraction to the recently
opened The Monarchs' Club and its swanky digs. The 113-year-old
building once was home to a speakeasy of the same name, and it has
reopened as a neighborhood pub. Owner Frank Lehnen, owner of Rocky's
Bar & Grill and the former Radio Tavern, has outfitted the interior
with vintage fixtures and original architectural elements. The style
reflects the history, minus the sobering consequences of the 18th
Amendment.
I first went to the Monarch seeking a quiet little
spot for dinner on the city's Northwest Side, an area that is going
through a business and cultural revival of sorts. But Monarch clearly
bucks the "order quietly and speak easy" heritage of its
namesake. Patrons seated at the bar sang -- and clumsily danced
-- along to wedding-reception standards such as "Brown Eyed
Girl" and "Friends in Low Places," raising shots
and generally having a good time.
Although space is somewhat limited, the high ceilings
and an open black-and-white tiled dance floor keep things from feeling
claustrophobic. Added touches such as exposed brick walls, a bar
made of white oak with burl maple inlay and a vintage back bar mirror
lend a classy air to the joint. Sports fans and television junkies
will appreciate a large-screen TV, typically tuned to pro-sports
and set to "mute." Beer aficionados will delight in the
extensive selection of well-crafted American and European beers.
History buffs will drool over the building's quirky past. (Example:
A woman once got stuck in a chimney while hiding during a police
raid on the original Monarch). The rest of us can sip our drinks
and be thankful we no longer need a special password or secret handshake
to grab a drink at this local pub.
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