Marines' Memorial Club

Coordinates: 37°47′20.05″N 122°24′37.69″W / 37.7889028°N 122.4104694°W / 37.7889028; -122.4104694
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Marines' Memorial Club
The Marines' Memorial Club and Hotel
Marines' Memorial Club is located in San Francisco
Marines' Memorial Club
Marines' Memorial Club
Location within San Francisco
Marines' Memorial Club is located in California
Marines' Memorial Club
Marines' Memorial Club
Marines' Memorial Club (California)
Marines' Memorial Club is located in the United States
Marines' Memorial Club
Marines' Memorial Club
Marines' Memorial Club (the United States)
Former namesWestern Women's Club
General information
Architectural styleSpanish Colonial-style
Address609 Sutter Street
Town or citySan Francisco, California
Coordinates37°47′20.05″N 122°24′37.69″W / 37.7889028°N 122.4104694°W / 37.7889028; -122.4104694
Completed1926
OwnerMarines Memorial Association
Technical details
Floor count12

The Marines' Memorial Club in San Francisco, California at 609 Sutter Street (at Mason), is a 501(c)19 nonprofit veterans charity and private social club for United States Marines and other veterans of the United States Armed Forces. The nonprofit Marines' Memorial Association owns the large building in the Union Square neighborhood of San Francisco that houses a hotel, theater, restaurant/bar, sports club, special event facilities, library, museum, memorial, and a military history bookstore.[1] The facility was built as the Western Women's Club in 1926.

Western Women's Club[edit]

The Western Women's Club building[2][3][4][5] is a 12-story Beaux-Arts-style building, designed by the firm of Walter Danforth Bliss and William Baker Faville,[6] and built in 1926. The Western Women's Club was a member of the General Federation of Women's Clubs. The Western Women's Club building was bought by the Marines Memorial Association in 1947.[6] Western Women's Club had a later location at 111 O'Farrell Street.[7]

Marines' Memorial Club[edit]

As a port city, San Francisco has, since its founding by Spain, been associated with military personnel – especially the navy – and merchant mariners. During World War II it was a point of embarcation for many service personnel in for the Pacific Theatre. Those who passed through the city before deployment would remember their experience and return after the war.[8]

The Marines' Memorial was opened as a club for veterans of the Marines, although membership is open to all United States servicemembers.[9] Early in 1946, the Commandant of the Marine Corps, General Alexander A. Vandegrift, had proposed a "living memorial" to Marine casualties from the War in the Pacific. A group of Marines arranged to buy a building owned by a women's club at Mason Street and Sutter Street in San Francisco,[1] whose members they had met through their participation in the wartime WAVES program.[10] The club opened on November 10, 1946, the anniversary of the founding of the Marine Corps.[11]

The theater predates the club, and was part of the original 1926 building. In its early days it hosted nationwide radio broadcasts by Bob Hope, Jack Benny, and Frank Sinatra. It later housed the San Francisco Actor's Workshop, which produced plays by Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, and Bertolt Brecht. It was also the first home of the American Conservatory Theater.[12]

Today the association has 21,000 members from all branches of the United States military, NOAA, and the Public Health Service, mostly from California.[13]

Amenities[edit]

The Tribute Memorial Wall.

The most noticeable features are a 650-seat repertory theater and a lobby display of military memorabilia, most notably the ship's bell from the USS San Francisco.[14] It also includes two restaurants (including the club's "Leatherneck Grill" steakhouse) and a Club One fitness center. The building also includes the Tribute Memorial Wall, a private memorial to American troops killed in the Iraq War and war in Afghanistan.[15][16]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "About the Living Memorial". Marines' Memorial Association.
  2. ^ Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration of Northern California (5 April 2011). San Francisco in the 1930s: The WPA Guide to the City by the Bay. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26880-7.
  3. ^ "Western Women's Club". Card Cow. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  4. ^ "San Francisco ephemera collection". California Digital Library. calisphere. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  5. ^ "midpacific_volume40_issue3" (PDF). evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu. Retrieved 15 April 2023. Western Women's Club, 609 Sutter St.
  6. ^ a b "In Our Rear View Mirror". 640 Heritage Preservation Foundation. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  7. ^ "Madera Nurses Attend CSNA Council Meetin". Madera Tribune. California Digital Newspaper Collection. 8 April 1952. Retrieved 15 April 2023. The meeting was held in the Western Women's Club at 111 O'Farrell Street and at noon a luncheon was held.
  8. ^ Carl Nolte (2007-10-04). "Snafus involving Marines in S.F. and Oakland have critics raving". San Francisco Chronicle.
  9. ^ Carl Nolte (2006-05-29). "Revering those lost to wars:S.F. wall honors casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan". San Francisco Chronicle.
  10. ^ Skye Jones. "Marines are welcome at the Marines Memorial".
  11. ^ John Garvey (2007). San Francisco in World War II. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-3050-5.
  12. ^ "Marines' Memorial Theatre". Union Square Theaters.
  13. ^ "Marines' Memorial Association". Marines' Memorial Association.
  14. ^ "Ship's Bell". USS San Francisco Memorial Foundation.
  15. ^ Carl Nolte (2008-03-16). "Examining the war in Iraq after 5 years". San Francisco Chronicle.
  16. ^ Scott Lindlaw (2007-03-26). "Long before the shooting stops, Americans memorialize war dead". Associated Press.

External links[edit]