'The
British have always liked the certainty of club membership': The controversial
UK clubs that kept women out
21 hours ago
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20250708-the-controversial-uk-clubs-that-kept-women-out
Clare McHugh
Three
hundred years since they first appeared, the capital's traditional members-only
gentlemen's clubs – still frequented by royalty and power brokers – have
endured and evolved. As controversy continues around The Garrick permitting
women members, a new book explores this peculiarly British phenomenon.
For more
than three centuries, London has been the global centre of private members'
clubs. In no other place have so many of these secretive sanctuaries come and
gone, and today, with a total of 133 operating, the British capital still
outstrips its closest rival, New York City, which hosts a mere 53 clubs.
Many of the
historic men-only London clubs have moved with the times, and now allow female
members. And arguably the most famous in traditional clubland, the Garrick
Club, founded in 1831, made the news last year when it finally decided to drop
its men-only rule. Since then, however, only a handful of women has been
elected as members there, and, last month, broadcast journalist Julie
Etchingham withdrew her candidacy. Reportedly, some prospective female
candidates are uncomfortable with the protracted vetting process and seeming
hostility of numerous members to women joining. The Savile Club, meanwhile,
voted earlier this year to keep women out. Hidebound attitudes remain, it
seems.
Clubs speak
to something deeply-rooted in human character the world over, and in the UK
they have special resonance
Now a new
book, London Clubland: A Companion for the Curious, by Dr Seth Alexander
Thévoz, provides a club-by-club overview, along with a deep dive into their
particularities – customs, rules, traditions and even a few recipes. Clubs have
often needed to evolve in order to survive, Thévoz reveals, and those that
endure tend to serve a distinct membership.
The author
believes that while clubs speak to something deeply-rooted in human character
the world over, in the UK they have special resonance. He tells the BBC:
"The British have always liked the certainty of club membership, and have
been hugely into associational culture, from young people joining the Scouts
and Girl Guides, to older people volunteering for an amateur dramatics
society."
How it began
It all started with coffee. In the second half
of the 17th Century, when coffee drinking was first introduced to England,
coffee houses were a welcome alternative to taverns and became associated with
good conversation. Samuel Pepys wrote in December 1660 of his evening at the
"Coffee-house" in Cornhill: "I find much pleasure in it through
the diversity of company – and discourse."
In 1693, an
Italian migrant to London, Francesco Bianco (who anglicised his name to Francis
White), opened an establishment that served both coffee and hot chocolate; he
called it Mrs White's Chocolate House. Patrons flocked to St James's Street,
not only for the hot beverages, but for the gambling room – the site of
illegal, high-stakes card games – tucked away at the back of the premises.
White's is still operating, and is London's oldest club. Only men are allowed
to join. (King Charles counts among its 1500 members; he held his stag night at
White's before his 1981 wedding to Princess Diana.)
Numerous
other clubs opened in this manner throughout the Georgian era, Thévoz notes,
because gambling dens labelled "private members' clubs" were more
difficult for the authorities to raid. As the aristocratic membership
increasingly demanded food and entertainment along with their gaming,
hospitality professionals took over the management. Brooks's (founded 1764) is
another Georgian club that has survived to this day, along with Boodle's
(1762), originally called Almack's. Boodle's "is probably the best-preserved
18th-Century clubhouse", Thévoz tells the BBC – passers-by can recognise
it by its iconic front-facing bow window.
Boom time
It was
during the 19th Century that clubs in London boomed – approximately a dozen
existed at the start of the century, and 400 by the end. Clubs in general
became less louche, in step with a new, Victorian interest in propriety. Most
significantly, they took on a central role in British politics, and scores of
political clubs were founded in central London in these years, in a swathe of
the city bound by Piccadilly to the north, Pall Mall to the south, St James's
Street to the west, and Haymarket to the east. Several of the most renowned,
party-affiliated clubs have endured to this day. The Carlton Club, the
Conservative stronghold, founded in 1832, was from the start a hotbed of gossip
and political intrigue. The Duke of Wellington, at one time a member, advised
on his deathbed: "Never write a letter to your mistress and never join the
Carlton Club."
The Reform
Club was established in 1836 on Pall Mall to provide a hub for Whigs and
Radicals, and later Liberals. It is also a setting in Around the World in
Eighty Days, the 1872 novel by Jules Verne – the protagonist Phileas Fogg makes
a £20,000 bet with six members that he can circumnavigate the globe and arrive
back "in this very room of the Reform Club" in 80 days' time.
'The best
club in London'
When in
October 1834 a massive fire destroyed the old Houses of Parliament, many of the
functions of government relocated to the clubs. The new Palace of Westminster
was modelled after a private members' club, with tea rooms, smoking rooms and
libraries, prompting Charles Dickens in 1864 to call the House of Commons
"the best club in London".
The prince,
a dedicated bon viveur, got fed up with the amount of gossip that was leaking
out of White's about his amorous activities – and founded his own club
One of the first clubs open to both men and
women, The Albemarle Club, founded in 1874, was associated from the start with
the burgeoning women's rights movement. It became notorious when member Oscar
Wilde was confronted there by the Marquess of Queensbury, father of his lover
Lord Alfred Douglas, in an incident that set off the ill-fated libel trial that
would lead to Wilde's conviction and imprisonment.
Royalty has
always favoured London clubs, but none more enthusiastically than Albert
Edward, the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII. The prince, a dedicated bon
viveur, got fed up with the amount of gossip that was leaking out of White's
about his amorous activities, Thévoz explains. The prince decided to found his
own club, the Marlborough Club, named after his London residence, in 1869. He
handpicked the first 400 members, and retained ultimate black-ball power, so he
could veto the membership of anyone he didn't trust.
At the dawn
of the 20th Century, London clubs were still going strong, and providing fodder
for fiction writers. According to Thévoz, the Drones Club featured in PG
Wodehouse's work most closely resembles Buck's Club in Mayfair, founded in
1919. The club was immediately popular for its US-style cocktail bar. The
signature drink was, then and now, the Buck's Fizz – Champagne and orange juice
with a mysterious twist.
In 2023,
conservative establishment Pratt's surprised many by admitting women for the
first time
Ian Fleming
was a member of Boodle's, upon which he based Blade's club in his James Bond
books. In Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited, protagonist Charles Ryder
gathers with friends at Bratt's, most likely inspired by Pratt's, a small
supper club in St James's founded in 1857, and owned since 1926 by the family
of the Duke of Devonshire. In 2023, this most conservative of establishments
surprised many by admitting women for the first time.
Clubs for
women enjoyed a heyday in the last decade of the 19th Century and the first of
the 20th, numbering 86 in all by Thevoz's count. Some were patronised by
wealthy women in town for shopping and the theatre. Others were residential,
offering affordable accommodation to single women beginning careers in the
capital. Muriel Spark, in her 1963 novel The Girls of Slender Means, based the
May of Teck Club, where her protagonists live, on The Service Women's Club.
Over the
past 100 years, nine out of 10 of the venerable members' clubs closed. The long
period of decline – beginning roughly in the early 1920s and accelerating after
World War Two – bottomed out in the 1970s. A change in social mores, a
dwindling number of ageing members, and steeper fees all played their part in
this downturn.
Those clubs
that continued to survive most often had a strong identity, and catered to a
distinctive group, such as the military (the In and the Out Club), actors (the
Garrick) or horse-racing enthusiasts (the Turf Club). Of the many historic
private clubs for women in London, only one remains, University Women's Club in
Mayfair. Other more recent iterations of women-only clubs have had mixed
results.
A modern
renaissance
Mark Birley
began a successful run of "new" clubs in 1963 with the members-only
nightclub Annabel's, located in a cavernous basement on Berkeley Square. He
used his extensive contacts among the upper classes to attract members – it is
said to be the only nightclub into which Queen Elizabeth II ever set foot.
But the real
modern renaissance of London clubs began in 1985, with the antithesis of the
old gentleman's club: a sparky, mixed-sex space, where admission was based not
on social rank but on achievement. The name, the Groucho Club, is a hat-tip to
Groucho Marx's famous remark that he would never want to be in a club that
would have him as a member. Established in Soho, it quickly attracted a starry
clientele – Stephen Fry wrote the club's original rule book, which insisted on
traditional discretion.
My
grandfather saw the clubs of London dominated by a clique of 'bores and oafs',
the self-conscious, self-appointed retainers of high culture – Pierre Waugh
Also in
1985, writer Auberon Waugh along with Victoria Glendinning founded the Academy
Club. "My grandfather's knee-jerk intolerance of any type of pomposity
inspired the Academy," grandson Pierre Waugh tells the BBC. "At the
time of its creation, he saw the clubs of London dominated by a clique of
'bores and oafs', the self-conscious, self-appointed retainers of high
culture." Waugh's baby continues to attract a literary membership today.
Thévoz reports: "The facilities are rather modest, though that is part of
the charm."
In the 19th
Century, such was the popularity of the top clubs, including the Athenaeum and
the Carlton, that prospective members could wait three decades to enter. Now at
the Hurlingham in Fulham, the closest thing to a US-style country club in
London, it can take a similar amount of time to be admitted, with priority
given to the existing members' immediate family members.
Dominating
members clubs in the 21st Century are the proprietary clubs (as opposed to
committee-run clubs), most notably Soho House, a large international
money-making operation with dozens of locations. In London, the group includes
venues in Greek Street and Dean Street, where Harry and Meghan, Duke and
Duchess of Sussex, reportedly went on their first date.
If the past
is any guide, the London club, ever morphing, will continue to be a feature of
life in the capital for the foreseeable future, an indication of its citizens'
abiding interest in conversation, eating and drinking in environs that in some
way they can call their own.
And clubs
will no doubt remain a subject of fascination and gossip. The latest news on
the Garrick is that those members of the club antagonistic to potential women
members, including Etchingham, have formed a WhatsApp group. Naturally enough
it has called itself "Status Quo".
London
Clubland: A Companion for the Curious by Seth Alexander Thévoz is published by
Little Brown
Clare McHugh
is the author of the historical novel The Romanov Brides, published by Harper
Collins.

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