The group focused on social events, educational speakers, funding city parks, giving scholarships to students, and feeding hungry school children.
[2] In 1923 after cotton prices crashed, the club and the city paid off the balance due on the property for Mesa's first hospital, preventing it from closure.
[2] The exterior of the building is painted white brick with a simple cornice detail running along the top of all the facades.
Under the turret, the main entrance which is surrounded by a corbel arch with brick columns topped with a bracket-like medallions.
[4] The interior is dominated by a large open hall with a stage but also includes a kitchen, restrooms, storage room, and a backstage area.