Club Life of London, Vol. 1 (of 2) / With Anecdotes of the Clubs, Coffee-Houses and Taverns of the Metropolis During the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries
Transcriber's Note:
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected. Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation in the original document have been preserved.
Martin Folkes is also spelled Martin Foulkes.
Captain Charles Morris. Engraved by W. Greatbatch from the Original Picture in the Possession of the Family.
CLUB LIFE OF LONDON WITH ANECDOTES OF THE CLUBS, COFFEE-HOUSES AND TAVERNS OF THE METROPOLIS DURING THE 17th, 18th, AND 19th CENTURIES.
BY JOHN TIMBS, F.S.A.
IN TWO VOLUMES.—VOL. I.
LONDON: RICHARD BENTLEY, PUBLISHER IN ORDINARY TO HER MAJESTY. 1866.
PRINTED BY JOHN EDWARD TAYLOR, LITTLE QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS.
Pictures of the Social Life of the Metropolis during the last two centuries are by no means rare. We possess them in Diaries, Memoirs, and Correspondence, in almost countless volumes, that sparkle with humour and gaiety, alternating with more serious phases,—political or otherwise,—according to the colour and complexion, and body of the time. Of such pictures the most attractive are Clubs.
Few attempts have, however, been made to focus the Club-life of periods, or to assemble with reasonable limits, the histories of the leading Associations of clubbable Men,—of Statesmen and Politicians, Wits and Poets, Authors, Artists, and Actors, and men of wit and pleasure, which the town has presented since the days of the Restoration; or in more direct succession, from the reign of Queen Anne, and the days of the Tatler and Spectator , and other Essayists in their wake.
The present Work aims to record this Club-life in a series of sketches of the leading Societies, in which, without assuming the gravity of history or biography, sufficient attention is paid to both to give the several narratives the value of trustworthiness. From the multitude of Clubs it has been found expedient to make a selection, in which the Author has been guided by the popular interest attached to their several histories. The same principle has been adopted in bringing the Work up to our own time, in which the customary reticence in such cases has been maintained.
John Timbs
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CLUB LIFE OF LONDON.
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
ORIGIN OF CLUBS.
THE MERMAID CLUB.
THE APOLLO CLUB.
EARLY POLITICAL CLUBS.
THE OCTOBER CLUB.
THE SATURDAY, AND BROTHERS CLUBS.
THE SCRIBLERUS CLUB.
THE CALVES' HEAD CLUB.
THE KING'S HEAD CLUB.
STREET CLUBS.
THE MOHOCKS.
BLASPHEMOUS CLUBS.
MUG-HOUSE CLUBS.
THE KIT-KAT CLUB.
THE ROYAL SOCIETY CLUB.
THE COCOA-TREE CLUB.
ALMACK'S CLUB.
ALMACK'S ASSEMBLY-ROOMS.
BROOKES'S CLUB.
ARTHUR'S CLUB.
WHITE'S CLUB.
BOODLE'S CLUB.
THE BEEF-STEAK SOCIETY.
BEEF-STEAK CLUBS.
CLUB AT TOM'S COFFEE-HOUSE.
THE KING OF CLUBS.
WATIER'S CLUB.
MR. CANNING AT THE CLIFFORD-STREET CLUB.
ECCENTRIC CLUBS.
JACOBITE CLUB.
THE WITTINAGEMOT OF THE CHAPTER COFFEE-HOUSE.
THE ROXBURGHE CLUB DINNERS.
THE SOCIETY OF PAST OVERSEERS, WESTMINSTER.
THE ROBIN HOOD.
THE BLUE-STOCKING CLUB.
THE IVY-LANE CLUB.
THE ESSEX HEAD CLUB.
THE LITERARY CLUB.
GOLDSMITH'S CLUBS.
THE DILETTANTI SOCIETY.
THE ROYAL NAVAL CLUB.
THE WYNDHAM CLUB.
THE TRAVELLERS' CLUB.
THE UNITED SERVICE CLUB.
THE ALFRED CLUB.
THE ORIENTAL CLUB.
THE ATHENÆUM CLUB.
THE UNIVERSITY CLUB.
ECONOMY OF CLUBS.
THE UNION CLUB.
THE GARRICK CLUB.
THE REFORM CLUB.
THE CARLTON CLUB.
THE CONSERVATIVE CLUB.
THE OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE CLUB.
THE GUARDS' CLUB.
THE ARMY AND NAVY CLUB.
THE JUNIOR UNITED SERVICE CLUB.
CROCKFORD'S CLUB.
"KING ALLEN," "THE GOLDEN BALL," AND SCROPE DAVIES.
THE FOUR-IN-HAND CLUB.
WHIST CLUBS.
PRINCE'S CLUB RACQUET COURTS.
AN ANGLING CLUB.
THE RED LIONS.
THE COVENTRY, ERECTHEUM, AND PARTHENON CLUBS.
ANTIQUARIAN CLUBS,—THE NOVIOMAGIANS.
THE ECCENTRICS.
DOUGLAS JERROLD'S CLUBS.
CHESS CLUBS.
APPENDIX.
ALMACK'S.
CLUBS AT THE THATCHED HOUSE.
THE KIT-KAT CLUB.
WATIER'S CLUB.
CLUBS OF 1814.
GAMING-HOUSES KEPT BY LADIES.
FOOTNOTES: