Hours:
Monday-Wednesday, 5-10pm
Thursday, 4-11pm
Friday & Saturday, 3pm-midnight
Sunday, 2-10pm

Happy Hour:
Sunday-Friday, 3-6pm & 9pm-midnight 

Doctor's Office Bar will be open from 3pm-midnight on concert days. Check the concert schedule before you make your plans.

About Doctor's Office Bar

Former dental office-turned-convivial bar

Menu  Beverage

By name, the Doctor's Office bar salutes its former tenure as dental office for the Masonic Home residents. But inside it celebrates its even earlier role as the lodge's game room. It is anchored by an extraordinary 1860s German back bar stocked with McMenamins craft beer, wines and spirits. And keeping in the game tradition, this small bar offers pool tables, pinball, shuffleboard and others, alongside four TVs showing meets and matches, with plenty of football on the weekends. Visits here are just what the doctor ordered, with a dose of original art thrown in.

Fun fact: Pinball was banned from the early 1940s to the mid-1970s in most of America's big cities. Be a rebel, play a round!

Anderson School
Adults
Children 6 & Under
Rate
  • Hours:
    Monday-Wednesday, 5-10pm
    Thursday, 4-11pm
    Friday & Saturday, 3pm-midnight
    Sunday, 2-10pm

    Happy Hour:
    Sunday-Friday, 3-6pm & 9pm-midnight 

    Doctor's Office Bar will be open from 3pm-midnight on concert days. Check the concert schedule before you make your plans.

    Upcoming Events

    see all events
    Happy 39th Birthday, Terminator!
    Sunday, November 24
    Repeal Day - Celebrating the End of Prohibition
    Thursday, December 05
    Ugly Sweater Day
    Friday, December 20

    Former dental office-turned-convivial bar

    Menu  Beverage

    By name, the Doctor's Office bar salutes its former tenure as dental office for the Masonic Home residents. But inside it celebrates its even earlier role as the lodge's game room. It is anchored by an extraordinary 1860s German back bar stocked with McMenamins craft beer, wines and spirits. And keeping in the game tradition, this small bar offers pool tables, pinball, shuffleboard and others, alongside four TVs showing meets and matches, with plenty of football on the weekends. Visits here are just what the doctor ordered, with a dose of original art thrown in.

    Fun fact: Pinball was banned from the early 1940s to the mid-1970s in most of America's big cities. Be a rebel, play a round!

@mcmenamins