Elks Lodge 222 was organized in Flint in 1891. They first met in a block of rooms in the Ward - Building in downtown Flint, and in 1900 moved to larger quarters in the Judd Block. At that time there were 28 members of the Lodge, but membership quickly expanded, and in 1902 the Elks moved into a floor in the newly completed Dryden Building. However, by 1912, membership had increased to over 1000 people, and the Lodge was forced to look for a larger and more appropriate home. The Lodge began a fund-raising campaign under the leadership of founder William C. Durant, and in 1913 purchased the lot on which this building sits. They hired the Detroit firm of Malcomson and Higginbotham to design a new building, and the Battle Creek firm of H.V. Snyder & Son to construct it. The building opened in March 1914.[2]
Early members of the Elks Lodge 222 included not only William C. Durant, but his partner J. Dallas Dort, Walter P. Chrysler, Buick president Harry Basset and founder William S. Ballenger Sr., Charles Barth, Doc Treat, Charles W. Nash, and Charles Stewart Mott.[2] According to Edward Soloman, head of a history committee for the Flint Elks Lodge 222, at one time "Back then, everyone who was anyone was part of the [Elks] club."[3] However, the club experienced a slow decline in membership, and by the early 1970s it had decreased significantly.[2] The club voted in 1971 to sell the lodge building, and it moved to its current location in Grand Blanc on East Maple Avenue.[3]
The building was available for sale in 2015, listed at $375,000.[3]