United Service Club

The United Service Club was a London gentlemen's club founded in 1815 for the use of senior officers in the British Army and Royal Navy – those above the rank of Major or Commander – and the club was accordingly known to its members as "The Senior". The club closed in 1978.

Because of its emphasis on senior officers, it was considered the most prestigious of London's military clubs – reflected partly in its entry fees, which were the highest of any London club in the 1880s, although there has been some speculation this was a device to limit the number of new members.[1]

The year after it was founded, in 1816, the Club moved into its first premises in Albermarle Street. Three years later, in 1819, it moved to Charles Street and in 1828 to a purpose-built clubhouse at 116 Pall Mall, designed by the noted architect John Nash.[2] The club house, on the corner with Waterloo Place. was built between 1826 and 1828. Its style, displaying military friezes along the top of the building, was later mirrored by the Athenaeum opposite. The building was later altered and extended by Decimus Burton between 1858–9, and then again by the firm of Thompson and Walford, in the years 1912–13 and 1929–30.[3] It was built on the site of the former Carlton House.[4]

In 1892 members were concerned that the club was facing financial difficulties and elected to allow lesser ranks - down to Army Captains and Naval Lieutenants - as members.[5] This led to a significant increase in membership and in 1910 the Club expanded its premises into the existing Nos. 118 and 119 Pall Mall.[6]

Despite the club's prestige, like many other clubs it ran into serious financial difficulties in the 1970s, and was forced to close in 1978. However, when the building was bought by the Institute of Directors (IoD), a condition of the sale was that the IoD would retain all of the club's original fixtures and fittings, which it still does today. Although the building still stands today substantially intact, the old club building makes up only part of the IoD headquarters on Pall Mall, whose complex encompasses several neighbouring buildings which were never part of the club.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Antonia Taddei, London clubs in the late nineteenth century (Oxford University discussion paper, 1999), p.16
  2. Jackson (1937)
  3. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=40704
  4. http://www.116pallmall.com/about_us/history_of_116/
  5. Jackson (1937), Page 95.
  6. Jackson (1937), Pages 116-117.

Bibliography

External links

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