Secrets revealed
These bars have a history that gets you close to Prohibition, minus the moonshine.
O’Donovan’s (2100 W Irving Park Rd, 773-478-2100) When it operated as Schulien’s in the ’30s, this basement speakeasy employed a house magician. (The speakeasy is gone, but the magician remains to this day.)
Club Lucky (1824 W Wabansia Ave, 773-227-2300) Prior to becoming a restaurant, this building was a hardware store with a huge, pine-paneled speakeasy in the basement.
Halligan (2274 N Lincoln Ave, 773-472-7940) This bar’s speakeasy lore stems from access panels in the basement that lead to a secret tunnel running under Lincoln Avenue.
Southport Lanes (3325 N Southport Ave, 773-472-6600) When Prohibition was enacted, this tavern turned itself into a bowling alley—but kept a separate speakeasy and brothel upstairs.
Emmit’s (495 N Milwaukee Ave, 312-563-9631) Before becoming a bar, this building was a bank—one rumored to have had a brothel and speakeasy in the basement, complete with escape tunnels.
Jake’s Pub (2932 N Clark St, 773-248-3318) During Prohibition, Jake Rosenbloom owned this space that sold candy and sandwiches, but the back room served something a little stronger.
Lottie’s (1925 W Cortland St, 773-489-0738) This grocery store, called Zagorski’s back in the day, served up drinks and striptease acts in the basement during Prohibition.
For a history of speakeasies, read "Secret scene" and for a look at a modern-day speakeasy read "Speakeasy to me."




It's okay to be a show-off.
With social reading, seamlessly share your favorite TOC articles, reviews and more with your Facebook friends, and check out what they're reading as well.
Share what you want, when you want: Once you've enabled social reading, easily enable/disable sharing anytime.
See what others are reading: With our new social activity feed, don't miss out on what your friends (and others) are reading.