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It certainly is passing
strange that none of the club
idlers with a leaning toward
scribbling and there are plenty
of them in this city of clubs
has happened to take up the
subject with which he was most
familiar and treat of clubs from
an ethical and philosophical
standpoint. Hundreds of young
men are being initiated in the
fraternity of clubs here in New
York every year, and like all
novitiates, they are eager for
information of the ways of the
organization or federation of
organizations, which they have
just joined. They may search in
vain for mental pabulum of this
sort, for none is to be found
aside from the occasional
newspaper squibs and magazine
articles on clubs, and these
references to the subject are
usually of a historical or news
character, rather than
philosophical. Leaving the
newly-fledged club men out of
the question, there are many of
the older generation who boast
club affiliations to whom a
compilation of "Don'ts" or Do's"
would not come amiss, in the
judgment of the more experienced
club men. The field is ready for
tilling; the question is, who
will be the pioneer?
Probably few persons have ever
given thought to the wonderful
development of the club movement
in this city, or to the
importance of that organized,
and yet unorganized, body, "the
club men of New York City." A
little more than half a century
ago New York had not a single
organized club of any
importance. Today more than 350
clubs have quarters of their own
on Manhattan islands, and at the
mildest estimate, "the club men
of New York City" number more
than 100,000 leaving out of
consideration the thousand and
one social organization of
humble character which are
dignified by the name of "club".
Granting that not more than two
or three scores of these 350
clubs are generally known and
that their total membership does
not exceed, say 40,000 men, it
is nevertheless a fact that this
body of 40,000 men, it is
nevertheless a fact that this
body of 40,000 men includes
nearly all the prominent figures
in literature, art, society,
finance, the professions,
commerce and politics in the
greatest city of the continent.
There are literary, art, social,
financial, professional
commercial, and political club
organizations, and any man of
prominence in any one of these
lines is pretty sure to be
enrolled in one or more of the
clubs toward which his
associations and interests lead
him.
Although each club is a
distinct organization by itself,
the club men of New York are
really an affiliated body. To a
certain extent their interests,
customs, and methods are
identical. A man expelled from
one club is practically
blacklisted at all the others,
in much the same fashion as
prevails in trade organizations,
and all clubs acknowledge
allegiance to a common code,
unwritten though it be.
Theoretically, there are 850
independent clubs in New York
City; practically, there is one
club organization, with 350
branches. The topic of the hour
in club circles is the embryonic
club, officially known for the
present as the metropolitan Club
and popularly known as the
"Millionaires' Club." The
circular invitation to the elect
of clubdom to enlist under the
banner of the as yet unnamed
club has been out for a week or
more, and those who have
received it and those who
haven't are equally interested
in its outcome. It has been
reported that invitations to
join the club had been sent to
1,000 clubbable new Yorkers, but
those who should know say that
only half this number of the
coveted documents have been
mailed. Somehow or other the
Knickerbockers Club, with its
400 members has fared much
better in respect to these
invitations than the Union Club,
with its 1,200 and more members.
The moving spirits in the
organization of the new club
have protested again and again
that there was nothing inimical
to the Union Club in their
plans, but it is a fact
nevertheless that they look to
the Knickerbockers rather than
to the Union for the nucleus of
their proposed resident
membership of 1,000 or 1,200.
The organizers of the new club
have been forced to admit that
they must abandon the
designation of the Metropolitan
Club, in view of the fact that
one of the leading Hebrew clubs
of the city, whose house is
distant only a stone's throw
from the proposed site of the
new club's house, long ago
pre-empted that name. The
circular invitation and the
accompanying copies of the
constitution, to be sure, have
christened the new club as the
Metropolitan, but there will
have to be a second christening.
A rumor that the club's option
on the Haminersley property had
expired and that the property
was again in the market has been
floating about town the last
week but probably has no
foundation in fact. It is a
moral certainty that the project
will go through, and not the
least guarantee of its success
is the concession to the
progressive spirit of the times
in the shape of the provision in
the constitution for the
entertainment of the wives and
daughters of members in the
clubhouse.
Clubs, like men, have their day,
and it is not unlikely that the
beginning of the next century
will find the world-famous Union
Club occupying third or fourth
place among New York's swell
social clubs. Already the
offspring of the Union, the
Knickerbockers, which was
founded, twenty years ago by
secedes from the Union, has
relegated the parent club to
second place in point of
exclusiveness and social
standing, and in the course of
time the new Metropolitan Club
will probably pose as the leader
of New York clubdom.
The Union was founded in 1836,
and for the better part of half
a century has had much to do
with the making of men's social
standing in New York. In its
infancy it had quarters at 343
Broadway, near Leonard Street,
and there remained for six
years. For the next eight years
it was housed at 376 Broadway,
and in 1850 it found a home at
691 Broadway, near Fourth
Street. In April, 1855, it took
possession of its present
quarters at Fifth Avenue and
Twenty-first Street, celebrating
that event by the first and only
ladies' reception in all its
history. Its slow but sure
progress from the once
fashionable district below Canal
Street to "the avenue" is
typical of the northward trend
of the business and social life
of the city.
The Union Club does not propose
to be caught napping by the
"Millionaires' Club." One of the
very causes of being of the
proposed new club is the
existence of a waiting list of
nearly four hundred names at the
Union. Had all the eligible
clubmen whose names appear on
this list been able to get into
the Union the new club would
probably have been unable to
secure the necessary support.
The far-sighted members of the
Union who appreciate this fact
and realize that the new club
would prove & veritable magnet
for these men, to the serious
injury of the Union, propose to
hit back at the club which is
threatening the Union's
prestige, and have arranged for
a special meeting of the Union
Club for the 5th of next month
to consider a proposition to
increase the membership of the
Union from 1,200 of 1,500.
The Governors of the Reform Club
propose to arrange for a series
of monthly lectures at the
clubhouse by men of national
reputation, who will there put
themselves on record on the
various topics in which the club
is interested. This first of the
series will probably be given
this month, although a speaker
has not yet been secured. The
Hon. Edward J. Phelps,
ex-minister to the Court of St.
James, has signified his
willingness to speak at one of
these meetings, and will
probably appear before a Reform
Club audience in April.
At last Wednesday night's
meeting of the Governors of the
club about thirty men were
elected to resident membership,
thus bringing the total number
of resident members up to 950.
As soon as the thousand mark is
reached the initiation fee will
be doubled.
The remarkably handsome hangings
ordered for the club's house
arrived a week or so ago and are
now in position. Aside from the
interior of the library, the
appointments of the new
clubhouse are now complete.
There are dozens of items of
expense in connection with the
maintenance of a club which
would never be dreamed of by
those not familiar with club
management. A Not unimportant
item is the provision of the
necessary liveries for the
employees of the club. Last year
the Manhattan Club invested
between $4,000 and $5,000 in the
adornment of its servitors, and
the Union League paid out nearly
$2,500 for the same purpose.
According to the statement of
membership which accompanies the
report of the Treasurer of the
Manhattan Club, (which were
printed in these columns last
Thursday,) the club had, on
March 1, 1,150 resident members,
500 non-resident members and
twenty life members. In the
course of the year ended Feb. 28
463 resident members and 206
non-resident members were
elected. In the same period the
club lost twenty-seven members
by death, resignation, and
suspension.
By the adoption of the
amendments to the Constitution
at the annual meeting last
Thursday night, increasing the
limit of resident membership to
1,500, subjecting all incoming
non-resident members to annual
dues of $25 apiece and raising
the dues for resident members
from $70 to $75, the club will
materially increase its revenues
for 1891.
Even, should the Manhattan take
in $4,00,000 or $500,000 during
the coming year, it is by no
means certain that it will lend
the clubs of the city in the
matter of income. A club which
was hardly thought of, outside
of athletics, a couple of years
ago, has now entered the field
as a candidate for those honors,
and it is not unlikely that it
will outstrip the Manhattan.
This club, the Manhattan
Athletic, will have between
3,500 and 4,000 members before
the end of 1891 and though its
members, as a rule, are not as
high livers as the Manhattan
men, they will out-number the
tenants of the Stewart house two
to one, and by mere force of
numbers may carry the day.
The income of the athletic club
from dues alone will exceed
$125,000; the house receipts
from the bar, restaurant, cards,
& c., may safely be set down us
from $800 to $1,000 a day; the
bachelor apartments in the
clubhouse will bring in perhaps,
$15,000 during the year, and all
told, the club's receipts for
1891 are likely to be nearer
$500,000 than $400,000. But one
other club will be in the race
with the Manhattan and the
Manhattan Athletic and that
club, the Union League, will do
well if its gross receipts equal
$300,000.
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