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Formation | 1693 (1693) |
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Type | Gentlemen's club |
Location |
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White's is agentlemen's club inSt James's,London. Founded in 1693 as ahot chocolate shop inMayfair, it is London's oldest club[1] and therefore the oldest private members' club in the world. It moved to its current premises onSt James's Street in 1778.
White's is the oldest gentlemen's club in London, founded in 1693, and is considered by many to be the most exclusive private club in London.[2]Notable current members includeCharles III and thePrince of Wales.[2] FormerBritish prime ministerDavid Cameron, whose fatherIan Cameron was the club's chairman, was a member for fifteen years but resigned in 2008, over the club's declining to admit women.[3][4][5][6]
White's is a member of the Association of London Clubs.[7]In January 2018, calling themselves 'Women in Whites', a group of female protesters infiltrated the club to highlight its single-sex policy, one managing to gain entry by pretending to be a man. They were removed.[8]
The club was originally established at 4Chesterfield Street, offCurzon Street inMayfair, in 1693 by an Italian immigrant named Francesco Bianco as ahot chocolate emporium under the nameMrs. White's Chocolate House. Tickets were sold to the productions atKing's Theatre andRoyal Drury Lane Theatre as a side-business. White's quickly made the transition from teashop to exclusive club and in the early 18th century, it was notorious as a gambling house; those who frequented it were known as "the gamesters of White's". The club gained a reputation for both its exclusivity and the often raffish behaviour of its members.Jonathan Swift referred to White's as the "bane of half the English nobility."[9]
In 1778 it moved to 37–38St James's Street. From 1783 it was the unofficial headquarters of theTory party, while theWhigs' clubBrooks's was just down the road. A few apolitical and affable gentlemen managed to belong to both. The new architecture featured abow window on the ground floor. In the later 18th century, the table directly in front of it became a seat of distinction, the throne of the most socially influential men in the club. This belonged to thearbiter elegantiarum,Beau Brummell, until he removed to the Continent in 1816, whenWilliam Arden, 2nd Baron Alvanley, took the place of honour. While there, he is supposed to have once bet £3,000 on which of two raindrops would first reach the bottom of a pane in the bow window. Later, the spot was reserved for the use ofArthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, until his death in 1852.
Alvanley's was not the most eccentric bet in White's famous betting book. Some of those entries were on sports, but more often on political developments, especially during the chaotic years of theFrench Revolution and theNapoleonic Wars. A good many were social bets, such as whether a friend would marry this year, or to whom.
The club continues to maintain its tradition as a club for gentlemen only, although one of its best known chefs from the early 1900s wasRosa Lewis,[10] a model for the central character in the BBC television seriesThe Duchess of Duke Street.[11]
There were two American members in the interwar period, one of whom was a general in the U.S. Army. Postwar American members included diplomatEdward Streator.
King Charles III held hisstag night at the club before his wedding toDiana Spencer in 1981.[12] His elder son,Prince William, was entered as a member of the club shortly after his birth.
The clubhouse is located at 37–38 St James's Street in theCity of Westminster and is a Grade Ilisted building.[13]
51°30′27.3″N0°8′24″W / 51.507583°N 0.14000°W /51.507583; -0.14000