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Philadelphia Club

39°56′56″N 75°09′43″W / 39.949°N 75.162°W / 39.949; -75.162

The Philadelphia Club
Philadelphia Club in 1916.
Formation1834
TypeGentlemen's club
23-0969200
HeadquartersThomas Butler Mansion, 1301 Walnut Street
Location
Region served
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and the surrounding region
Membership
400[1]

Philadelphia Club was founded in 1834 and is located at 13th and Walnut Streets in Center City, Philadelphia. It is the oldest city club in the United States and one of the oldest gentlemen's clubs. Notable members have included George Meade, Owen Wister, and many members of the Du Pont and Biddle families.

History Edit

Founding Edit

The club's founders were a group of men who met to play cards at Mrs. Rubicam's Coffeehouse at the northwest corner of 5th & Minor Streets in Philadelphia. In early 1834, they moved around the corner to the Adelphia Building at 212 South 5th Street, taking the new building's name as the club's name. The Adelphia Club held its first recorded meeting on March 21, 1834. The following year, its members moved to the Joseph Bonaparte house at 260 South 9th Street, and changed the club's name to The Philadelphia Club. In 1843 they moved to 919 Walnut Street, and in 1850 the club moved to its current location, the Thomas Butler Mansion at 1301 Walnut Street. Frederick J. Benton the great-grandson of Joseph Bonaparte, was the owner of the nightspot in the 1930s early 1940s.[2]

American Civil War Edit

Union Army General George Meade was admitted to club membership only after winning the Battle of Gettysburg.

Presidents Day Edit

Following Proclamation 87 - Celebration of George Washington's Birthday made by President Abraham Lincoln on February 19, 1862,[3] Philadelphia celebrated the Birthday of President George Washington with a military parade procession on Broad, Walnut and Chestnut Streets. The parade occurred on February 22, 1862, and was led by Major General Robert Patterson. The Club celebrated this occasion with a tribute President Washington. Philadelphia artist Joseph Boggs Beale recorded the club's tribute in his diary:

The club house, 13th & Walnut, was illuminated with candles at every pane of glass, & had a beautiful American flag hanging so that the light on it showed it several squares away. In one of their windows they had a pure white marble head of Washington & the American flag (silk) covering the pedestal & this was set off with a dark red background and brilliantly lighted from above.[4]

Prohibition Edit

In 1931, during Prohibition, the Philadelphia Club was raided by members of the Philadelphia Police Department, led by Bronislaw Wielbaba, in an effort to seize illegal spirits and wine. According to Weilbaba's testimony, the police captured 401 quarts, 118 pints, and a 1-gallon jug of alcohol during the raid of member lockers on February 2, 1931. The only arrest made was of the club manager.[5]

Clubhouse Edit

 
The Philadelphia Club, a 1912 illustration by Joseph Pennell

Design of the Butler Mansion is attributed to William Strickland and was one of his few residential commissions. It was built as a city house for Thomas Butler, only son of South Carolina U.S. Senator Pierce Butler. Thomas Butler died before the building's 1838 completion, and it stood vacant until its 1849 purchase by The Philadelphia Club. The club added a billiard room, moved the kitchen to the basement, and opened its new clubhouse in 1850. It was altered in 1888-89 by Frank Furness, who designed a rear addition and expanded its kitchens and main dining room.[6][7] Wilson Eyre renovated its interiors a decade later, and additional alterations were done by Horace Trumbauer in 1905 and 1908, and by Mellor, Meigs & Howe in 1916.[8]

George C. Boldt, hired in 1876 as a dishwasher, rose to become the club's steward and married the former steward's daughter. With financial backing from club members, he built the Bellevue Hotel in Philadelphia; he later built the Bellevue Stratford Hotel, also in Philadelphia, and he managed the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City.

Jimmy Duffy, a Philadelphia Main Line caterer, was the club's bartender from 1895 to 1929.[9]

In addition to card rooms, dining rooms, smoking rooms, and a bar, the Club contains a library, a large collection of Philadelphia prints, a collection of game trophy heads donated by Theodore Roosevelt Jr. and lodging rooms on its upper stories.[10]

Food Edit

The Philadelphia Club features Veal and Ham Pie whose ancestor may be the "Travellers Pie," once a famous dish at London's Travellers Club that features bacon and pork as well as veal and ham.[11]

Presidents and guests Edit

Among the club's presidents have been Captain James Biddle, George H. Boker, Adolph E. Borie, General George Cadwalader, Mayor Richard Vaux, and Owen Wister, who wrote its 1934 centennial history.

Among the club's guests have been twelve U.S. presidents: John Quincy Adams,[12] Martin Van Buren, James K. Polk, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Ulysses S. Grant, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, William McKinley, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Gerald R. Ford, and George H. W. Bush; soldiers and sailors George B. McClellan, William Tecumseh Sherman, William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody, George Dewey, George Goethals and Jack Keane; writers, artists, actors and musicians: William Makepeace Thackeray, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Henry Irving, Charles Kemble, Edwin Booth, Booth Tarkington, John Barrymore, Joseph Pennell, Leopold Stokowski, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Bram Stoker, Eugene Ormandy, Louis Kahn and Roger Scruton; and other public men Talleyrand, Stephen A. Douglas, Lord Randolph Churchill, Grand Duke Alexander, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Duarte Pio, Henry Cabot Lodge, Winston Churchill, Lord Louis Mountbatten, and Henry Clay.[13]

In its first 119 years, women were admitted to the club on only three occasions: balls in January 1851 and January 1869 and the centennial reception in October 1934. In May 1953 the membership voted to allow women guests at dinners. Many restrictions have since been eased, but women remain excluded from membership.[14] In the mid-1970s, the club hired a female barber, Isabella Judith Devaney, who worked there for 18 years before leaving due to health problems.[citation needed]

Status as the "oldest club" Edit

The Philadelphia Club is the oldest City Club in the United States.[15] Three rural social clubs for men are older, but none of them offers the facilities of a traditional gentlemen's city club – regular hours, paid staff, a bar, a dining room, lodging rooms – that are associated with the English model of city clubs in the St. James's district of London.

The three older social clubs are:

Notable members Edit

Critical assessment Edit

In an April 2008 article from the gossip publication, Philadelphia Magazine described the club:

The Philadelphia Club, 1301 Walnut Street; 215-735-5924. The oldest and most guarded of the city's old-guard clubs sits, with increasing incongruity, at the edge of the Gayborhood – but the Philadelphia Club makes no adjustments to passing fads. Unmarked outside but for a discreet awning logo, it is said to be one of the oldest men's clubs in the U.S., feeding the city's elite since 1834. Inside the three-story building, the Philadelphia Club is – except on occasional nights when members gather around the piano to sing – kept deathly quiet by members eating Old Philadelphia lunches of chicken salad and fried oysters. The blue bloods hang out to play an archaic domino game called sniff. This is the hardest club in town to join, limited largely to old Philadelphia families. Walter Annenberg applied for membership once and was blackballed – though he was eventually accepted. Was he turned down because he was Jewish? Because he made enemies? Who knows. Founded: 1834. Number of members: 400. Notable facilities: Rooms for napping. Wait list: Unknown. Demographics: Pretty damn white, although it reportedly got into the token-Jew business in the 19th century. Notable members: Socialite Robert Montgomery Scott. Food: Members mention the ham and veal pie. Crustiness: As crusty as that ham-and-veal pie.[1]

Reciprocal Relationships Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b Issenberg, Sasha; Miller, Blake; and Patel, Roxanne. "Members Only," Philadelphia Magazine (April 18, 2008).
  2. ^ Rivinus, pp. 8-9.
  3. ^ Lincoln, Abraham. "Proclamation 87 - Celebration of George Washington's Birthday February 19, 1862" American Presidency Project
  4. ^ Beale, Joseph Boggs. Education of an Artist: The Diary of Joseph Boggs Beale, 1856-1862
  5. ^ "Illegal alcohol at the Philadelphia Club" (photograph and caption) Philadelphia Evening Bulletin (February 27, 1931) on the Temple University Libraries website
  6. ^ Thomas, George E.; Cohen, Jeffrey A.; and Lewis, Michael J. Frank Furness: The Complete Works (Princeton Architectural Press, revised 1996), pp. 66, 280.
  7. ^ Furness addition photo from Flickr
  8. ^ Philadelphia Register of Historic Places: 1956; National Register of Historic Places: 1984, contributing property to East Center City Commercial District.
  9. ^ Rivinus, p. 38.
  10. ^ Bell.
  11. ^ Freedman.
  12. ^ Bell
  13. ^ Rivinus, 24-26.
  14. ^ Rivinus, 30-32.
  15. ^ Whitaker's Almanack 2008. A&C Black. 2008. p. 649. ISBN 978-0-7136-8554-1.

Bibliography

  • Bell, Malcolm Jr. "Major Butler's Legacy." (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1987)
  • Freedman, Paul. (2017-04-07) "The Fascinating History of Food at Private Clubs." [1]
  • Klaus, William R. "This Old House." ( privately printed, 1999).
  • Lippincott, Horace Mather. "The Philadelphia Club," Early Philadelphia: Its People, Life and Progress (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1917), pp. 300–02.
  • Rivinus, F. Markoe. The Philadelphia Club, 1934-1984 (privately printed, 1984).
  • Wister, Owen. The Philadelphia Club, 1834-1934 (privately printed, 1934).
  • Wainwright, Nicholas B. "Education of an Artist: The Diary of Joseph Boggs Beale."

External links Edit

  • The Philadelphia Club from Bryn Mawr College.
  • The Philadelphia Club from wikimapia.


philadelphia, club, 1916, formation1834typegentlemen, clubtax, 0969200headquartersthomas, butler, mansion, 1301, walnut, streetlocationphiladelphia, pennsylvaniaregion, servedphiladelphia, pennsylvania, surrounding, regionmembership400, designationsphiladelphi. 39 56 56 N 75 09 43 W 39 949 N 75 162 W 39 949 75 162 The Philadelphia ClubPhiladelphia Club in 1916 Formation1834TypeGentlemen s clubTax ID no 23 0969200HeadquartersThomas Butler Mansion 1301 Walnut StreetLocationPhiladelphia PennsylvaniaRegion servedPhiladelphia Pennsylvania and the surrounding regionMembership400 1 DesignationsPhiladelphia Register of Historic PlacesPhiladelphia Club was founded in 1834 and is located at 13th and Walnut Streets in Center City Philadelphia It is the oldest city club in the United States and one of the oldest gentlemen s clubs Notable members have included George Meade Owen Wister and many members of the Du Pont and Biddle families Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 American Civil War 1 3 Presidents Day 1 4 Prohibition 1 5 Clubhouse 1 6 Food 1 7 Presidents and guests 2 Status as the oldest club 3 Notable members 4 Critical assessment 5 Reciprocal Relationships 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditFounding Edit The club s founders were a group of men who met to play cards at Mrs Rubicam s Coffeehouse at the northwest corner of 5th amp Minor Streets in Philadelphia In early 1834 they moved around the corner to the Adelphia Building at 212 South 5th Street taking the new building s name as the club s name The Adelphia Club held its first recorded meeting on March 21 1834 The following year its members moved to the Joseph Bonaparte house at 260 South 9th Street and changed the club s name to The Philadelphia Club In 1843 they moved to 919 Walnut Street and in 1850 the club moved to its current location the Thomas Butler Mansion at 1301 Walnut Street Frederick J Benton the great grandson of Joseph Bonaparte was the owner of the nightspot in the 1930s early 1940s 2 American Civil War Edit Union Army General George Meade was admitted to club membership only after winning the Battle of Gettysburg Presidents Day EditFollowing Proclamation 87 Celebration of George Washington s Birthday made by President Abraham Lincoln on February 19 1862 3 Philadelphia celebrated the Birthday of President George Washington with a military parade procession on Broad Walnut and Chestnut Streets The parade occurred on February 22 1862 and was led by Major General Robert Patterson The Club celebrated this occasion with a tribute President Washington Philadelphia artist Joseph Boggs Beale recorded the club s tribute in his diary The club house 13th amp Walnut was illuminated with candles at every pane of glass amp had a beautiful American flag hanging so that the light on it showed it several squares away In one of their windows they had a pure white marble head of Washington amp the American flag silk covering the pedestal amp this was set off with a dark red background and brilliantly lighted from above 4 Prohibition Edit In 1931 during Prohibition the Philadelphia Club was raided by members of the Philadelphia Police Department led by Bronislaw Wielbaba in an effort to seize illegal spirits and wine According to Weilbaba s testimony the police captured 401 quarts 118 pints and a 1 gallon jug of alcohol during the raid of member lockers on February 2 1931 The only arrest made was of the club manager 5 Clubhouse Edit nbsp The Philadelphia Club a 1912 illustration by Joseph PennellDesign of the Butler Mansion is attributed to William Strickland and was one of his few residential commissions It was built as a city house for Thomas Butler only son of South Carolina U S Senator Pierce Butler Thomas Butler died before the building s 1838 completion and it stood vacant until its 1849 purchase by The Philadelphia Club The club added a billiard room moved the kitchen to the basement and opened its new clubhouse in 1850 It was altered in 1888 89 by Frank Furness who designed a rear addition and expanded its kitchens and main dining room 6 7 Wilson Eyre renovated its interiors a decade later and additional alterations were done by Horace Trumbauer in 1905 and 1908 and by Mellor Meigs amp Howe in 1916 8 George C Boldt hired in 1876 as a dishwasher rose to become the club s steward and married the former steward s daughter With financial backing from club members he built the Bellevue Hotel in Philadelphia he later built the Bellevue Stratford Hotel also in Philadelphia and he managed the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City Jimmy Duffy a Philadelphia Main Line caterer was the club s bartender from 1895 to 1929 9 In addition to card rooms dining rooms smoking rooms and a bar the Club contains a library a large collection of Philadelphia prints a collection of game trophy heads donated by Theodore Roosevelt Jr and lodging rooms on its upper stories 10 Food Edit The Philadelphia Club features Veal and Ham Pie whose ancestor may be the Travellers Pie once a famous dish at London s Travellers Club that features bacon and pork as well as veal and ham 11 Presidents and guests Edit Among the club s presidents have been Captain James Biddle George H Boker Adolph E Borie General George Cadwalader Mayor Richard Vaux and Owen Wister who wrote its 1934 centennial history Among the club s guests have been twelve U S presidents John Quincy Adams 12 Martin Van Buren James K Polk Franklin Pierce James Buchanan Ulysses S Grant Theodore Roosevelt William Howard Taft William McKinley Franklin D Roosevelt Gerald R Ford and George H W Bush soldiers and sailors George B McClellan William Tecumseh Sherman William F Buffalo Bill Cody George Dewey George Goethals and Jack Keane writers artists actors and musicians William Makepeace Thackeray Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Henry Irving Charles Kemble Edwin Booth Booth Tarkington John Barrymore Joseph Pennell Leopold Stokowski Douglas Fairbanks Jr Bram Stoker Eugene Ormandy Louis Kahn and Roger Scruton and other public men Talleyrand Stephen A Douglas Lord Randolph Churchill Grand Duke Alexander Oliver Wendell Holmes Duarte Pio Henry Cabot Lodge Winston Churchill Lord Louis Mountbatten and Henry Clay 13 In its first 119 years women were admitted to the club on only three occasions balls in January 1851 and January 1869 and the centennial reception in October 1934 In May 1953 the membership voted to allow women guests at dinners Many restrictions have since been eased but women remain excluded from membership 14 In the mid 1970s the club hired a female barber Isabella Judith Devaney who worked there for 18 years before leaving due to health problems citation needed Status as the oldest club EditThe Philadelphia Club is the oldest City Club in the United States 15 Three rural social clubs for men are older but none of them offers the facilities of a traditional gentlemen s city club regular hours paid staff a bar a dining room lodging rooms that are associated with the English model of city clubs in the St James s district of London The three older social clubs are The South River Club in South River Maryland a fishing club that meets four times a year was founded c 1690 1700 The Schuylkill Fishing Company in Andalusia Pennsylvania which meets informally at the Philadelphia Club during winter months was founded in 1732 The Old Colony Club in Plymouth Massachusetts which meets on Friday nights and special occasions was founded in 1769 Notable members EditWilliam Wallace Atterbury Edward Fitzgerald Beale Edward Julius Berwind Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle Jr Francis Beverly Biddle James Biddle Livingston L Biddle Jr Curtis Bok George Henry Boker Adolph E Borie George Cadwalader John Cadwalader Jr Alexander J Cassatt George William Childs William Thaddeus Coleman Jr Fitz Eugene Dixon Jr Anthony J Drexel Franklin D Olier Henry Francis du Pont Wilson Eyre Edwin H Fitler Thomas Sovereign Gates Thomas S Gates Jr Charles Gilpin Robert Goelet T Truxtun Hare Howard Henry George Howe John G Johnson Gerry Lenfest William Draper Lewis James McCrea Robert L McNeil Jr George Meade Boies Penrose Spencer Penrose Eli Kirk Price II Samuel Rea William T Read George M Robeson Theodore Roosevelt Jr Joseph George Rosengarten Robert Montgomery Scott Thomas A Scott Frank Thomson Charlemagne Tower Jr Richard Vaux Ethelbert Watts Piers Wedgwood 4th Baron Wedgwood Francis Wharton George D Widener Jr Isaac J Wistar Langhorne Wister Owen Wister Clarence C ZantzingerCritical assessment EditIn an April 2008 article from the gossip publication Philadelphia Magazine described the club The Philadelphia Club 1301 Walnut Street 215 735 5924 The oldest and most guarded of the city s old guard clubs sits with increasing incongruity at the edge of the Gayborhood but the Philadelphia Club makes no adjustments to passing fads Unmarked outside but for a discreet awning logo it is said to be one of the oldest men s clubs in the U S feeding the city s elite since 1834 Inside the three story building the Philadelphia Club is except on occasional nights when members gather around the piano to sing kept deathly quiet by members eating Old Philadelphia lunches of chicken salad and fried oysters The blue bloods hang out to play an archaic domino game called sniff This is the hardest club in town to join limited largely to old Philadelphia families Walter Annenberg applied for membership once and was blackballed though he was eventually accepted Was he turned down because he was Jewish Because he made enemies Who knows Founded 1834 Number of members 400 Notable facilities Rooms for napping Wait list Unknown Demographics Pretty damn white although it reportedly got into the token Jew business in the 19th century Notable members Socialite Robert Montgomery Scott Food Members mention the ham and veal pie Crustiness As crusty as that ham and veal pie 1 Reciprocal Relationships EditUnion Club of the City of New YorkSee also EditList of traditional gentlemen s clubs in the United States Old PhiladelphiansReferences EditNotes a b Issenberg Sasha Miller Blake and Patel Roxanne Members Only Philadelphia Magazine April 18 2008 Rivinus pp 8 9 Lincoln Abraham Proclamation 87 Celebration of George Washington s Birthday February 19 1862 American Presidency Project Beale Joseph Boggs Education of an Artist The Diary of Joseph Boggs Beale 1856 1862 Illegal alcohol at the Philadelphia Club photograph and caption Philadelphia Evening Bulletin February 27 1931 on the Temple University Libraries website Thomas George E Cohen Jeffrey A and Lewis Michael J Frank Furness The Complete Works Princeton Architectural Press revised 1996 pp 66 280 Furness addition photo from Flickr Philadelphia Register of Historic Places 1956 National Register of Historic Places 1984 contributing property to East Center City Commercial District Rivinus p 38 Bell Freedman Bell Rivinus 24 26 Rivinus 30 32 Whitaker s Almanack 2008 A amp C Black 2008 p 649 ISBN 978 0 7136 8554 1 Bibliography Bell Malcolm Jr Major Butler s Legacy Athens University of Georgia Press 1987 Freedman Paul 2017 04 07 The Fascinating History of Food at Private Clubs 1 Klaus William R This Old House privately printed 1999 Lippincott Horace Mather The Philadelphia Club Early Philadelphia Its People Life and Progress Philadelphia J B Lippincott Company 1917 pp 300 02 Rivinus F Markoe The Philadelphia Club 1934 1984 privately printed 1984 Wister Owen The Philadelphia Club 1834 1934 privately printed 1934 Wainwright Nicholas B Education of an Artist The Diary of Joseph Boggs Beale External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philadelphia Club The Philadelphia Club from Bryn Mawr College The Philadelphia Club from wikimapia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philadelphia Club amp oldid 1165756239, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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