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Alpine Club (UK)

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The Alpine Club
Founded 1857
Home Page alpine-club.org.uk
Address 55-56 Charlotte Road, Shoreditch
Clubhouse occupied since 1991
Club established for Mountaineers

The Alpine Club was founded in London in 1857 and was probably the world's first mountaineering club. It is UK mountaineering's acknowledged 'senior club'.

History

On 22 December 1857 a group of British mountaineers met at Ashley's Hotel in London. All were active in the Alps and instrumental in the development of alpine mountaineering during the golden age of alpinism (1854–1865). It was at this meeting that the Alpine Club, under the chairmanship of E. S. Kennedy, was born. John Ball was the first president and Kennedy, the first vice-president, succeeded him as president of the club from 1860 to 1863. It then moved its headquarters to the Metropole Hotel.

One hundred and fifty years later, the Alpine Club continues, and its members remain extremely active in the Alps and the Greater Ranges, as well as in mountain arts, literature and science.

For many years it had the characteristics of a London-based Gentlemen's club, including a certain imprecision in the qualification for membership (said to have been 'A reasonable number of respectable peaks'). By the mid 20th century however, the club had evolved into the UK's senior mountaineering club with a clear qualification for membership, for both men and women, and an 'aspirant' grade for those working towards full membership. However, the club still requires that existing members act as proposer and seconder for prospective members.

Though the club organises some UK-based meets, its primary focus has always tended towards mountaineering overseas, and it is associated more with exploratory mountaineering than with purely technical climbing (the early club was once dismissed as doing very little climbing but 'a lot of walking steeply uphill'). These higher technical standards were often to be found in offshoots such as the 'Alpine Climbing Group' (ACG), founded in 1952.

The club has produced a suite of guidebooks which cover some of the more popular Alpine mountaineering regions. It also holds extensive book and photo libraries as well as an archive of historical artifacts which are regularly loaned out to exhibitions. The club's history has recently been documented by George Band in his book Summit: 150 Years of the Alpine Club, and its artists in The Artists of the Alpine Club by Peter Mallalieu. Its members' activities are recounted annually in the club's publication the Alpine Journal.

As of 2009, the membership subscription costs between £39 and £60 per year, with a £27 rate for younger members. There is no joining fee [1].

Presidents

Premises

The current headquarters of the Alpine Club are at 55 Charlotte Road, on the edge of the City of London. The club acquired the freehold of this five-storey Victorian warehouse in 1991,[1] and the club's lecture room, bunkhouse, library and archives are in the building.

The club's first premises were at 8 St Martin's Place, Trafalgar Square, where it rented rooms in 1858.[2] In 1895 the club moved to 23 Savile Row, and from 1937 to 1990 the club was based at 74 South Audley Street in Mayfair, London (in 1936–1937 the surveying firm of Pilditch, Chadwick and Company had converted the ground floor of the building into suitable premises for the club).[3] The club library was at the back of the building, in what was once the picture gallery of Sir William Cuthbert Quilter. In 1990 the club sold its lease and – before moving to Charlotte Road – briefly shared quarters with the Ski Club of Great Britain at 118 Eaton Square.

In June 1907, the Scottish artist Sholto Johnstone Douglas held an exhibition of his portraits at the Club.[4]

References

  1. ^ http://www.alpine-club.org.uk/alpineclub/hq.htm Date accessed: 03 March 2010.
  2. ^ http://www.oxforddnb.com/public/themes/96/96327.html Date accessed: 09 January 2008.
  3. ^ http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42154 'South Audley Street: West Side', Survey of London: volume 40: The Grosvenor Estate in Mayfair, Part 2 (The Buildings) (1980), pp. 303-315. Date accessed: 09 January 2008. This survey claims the club moved to South Audley Street in 1939.
  4. ^ The International Studio, v. 32 (1907) p. 143

See also