Puneet Varma (Editor)

The National Club

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Province
  
Ontario

Completed
  
17 December 1907

Architect
  
S. George Curry

Phone
  
+1 416-364-3247

Designated as world heritage site
  
17 March 1976

The National Club

Address
  
303 Bay St, Toronto, ON M5H 2R1, Canada

Hours
  
Open today · 7AM–10PMWednesday7AM–10PMThursday7AM–10PMFriday7AM–10PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosedMonday7AM–10PMTuesday7AM–10PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Toronto Club, The Spoke Club, Albany Club, The Boulevard Club, Granite Club

Profiles

Suburbs new lynn s dane watson on day one of the national club cricket championships 2016


The National Club is a private club founded in 1874 for business professionals located in the Financial District of Downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It provides private dining and meeting facilities and accommodations to its members and guests.

Contents

History

The National Club was founded by Ontario Letters Patent on July 6, 1874. There were 24 members in the original roster. The National Club was created to provide a home and Toronto focus for Canada First, a nationalist movement founded in 1868 by George Denison, Henry Morgan, Charles Mair, William Foster and Robert Grant Haliburton. Canada First sought to “promote a sense of national purpose and to lay the intellectual foundations for Canadian nationality.”

On March 30, 1875 the National Club moved into rented premises on the west side of Bay Street immediately south of the building that housed the original Toronto Stock Exchange. The Club’s first president was Dr. Goldwin Smith, a prominent historian and journalist, and supporter of the Canada First movement. His First Vice President was William Pearce Howland, the second Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. Other founders included the Hon. Edward Blake, Ontario’s first premier, and Sir Oliver Mowat, Ontario’s second premier.

By the 1880s the Canada First movement virtually disappeared and the National Club had established itself as a general business and social club for Toronto’s business and political leaders of all affiliations.

In 1903 $50,000 of a total estimated construction cost of $90,000 was raised by subscription among National Club members to purchase a lot and build a new clubhouse at 303 Bay Street. On September 12, 1906 the cornerstone was laid and on December 17, 1907, the National Club’s new premises opened. The Globe newspaper the following day described the new premises designed by noted Toronto architect S. George Curry as “Architecturally... a triumph.” The building is protected under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act since March 17, 1976 and also enjoys a heritage easement agreement since July 16, 1984. It was designed by S.G. Curry, of the Sproatt & Rolph architectural firm. The National Club is one of the few remaining intact buildings on Bay Street from this period.

Today

The National Club maintains its historic clubhouse at 303 Bay Street, composed of three large principal dining rooms, eleven private meeting rooms and three lounges. A new rooftop patio and enclosure was opened in early 2014. The National Club has six rooms of hotel-style accommodations for visiting members and guests. The red brick, four-storey Georgian building has undergone several periods of extensive internal renovation in its history to maintain both the cosmetic and mechanical aspects of the facilities. In 2014 the National Club received the "Club of the Year Award" from the Canadian Society of Club Managers.

The National Club has a significant collection of Canadian art and a wine cellar with approximately 40,000 bottles. Stained glass windows in the Main Dining Room depicting the arms of Canada and the provinces were created by the Toronto company of Pringle & London, which worked with Tiffany & Co. and also installed many of the Toronto church and cathedral stained glass windows in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The National Club is connected to the Toronto PATH system of concourses and underground tunnels through an unmarked door leading to the lower level of the Scotia Plaza. The National Club is affiliated with approximately 250 other private clubs in Canada and around the world, providing its members with reciprocal dining and accommodation privileges.

Membership

Members must be men or women over the age of 21 years and be of good character, and be reviewed and approved by the Board of Directors. There are otherwise no restrictions on membership. The National Club has approximately 500 resident members, in addition to members in senior, overseas and other categories. The National Club was one of the earliest Toronto private city clubs to extend full membership to women in 1992.

The membership of the former Ontario Club joined the National Club in 2010 after the lease expired on its own clubhouse in Commerce Court.

Prominent members

The National Club has had on its roster a number of noted Canadians, including many national and provincial politicians. Sir Wilfrid Laurier was an early member, and sat for a portrait after opening the current clubhouse in 1907. Others include:

  • Joseph E. Atkinson, founder, Toronto Star newspaper
  • Wilfrid Dinnick, developer of Toronto’s Lawrence Park Estates.
  • Timothy Eaton, founder of Eaton’s department stores
  • Gerhardt Heintzman, founder of Heintzman Pianos.
  • Sidney Hermant, President, Imperial Optical
  • Edward J. Lennox, noted architect responsible for the design of Old City Hall, Casa Loma, King Edward Hotel
  • John Northway, founder, Northway Department Stores
  • Henry Patten, General Manager, Toronto Transportation Commission
  • Robert Simpson, founder of Simpson’s department stores
  • Fred Smye, President, Avro Aircraft Limited (Canada)
  • Grant of arms

    In 1996 the National Club was granted its own arms and flag by the Canadian Heraldic Authority.

    References

    The National Club Wikipedia