Founded | 1857 |
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Location |
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Coordinates | 29°57′10.7″N 90°04′10.3″W / 29.952972°N 90.069528°W |
The Pickwick Club is a private gentlemen's club in New Orleans, Louisiana.[1] [2] Founded in 1857, The Pickwick Club and the Mistick Krewe were originally one group comprising two organizations. After The Boston Club, The Pickwick Club is the second oldest remaining in the city.
History
On February 8, 1857, a group of men, some former Orleans Club members, who resided in the Anglo-American neighborhoods of New Orleans, met in the Club Room of the Gem Saloon-a former residence of William Parker of Natchez, located at Old No 17 Royal Street (127 Royal Street).[3] The idea was initially conceived at Pope's pharmacy on the corner of Jackson and Prytania. Six gentlemen (most originally from Mobile, Alabama) sent out an invitation to a select group of friends to meet at the Gem Saloon, where the first carnival organization the Miskick Krewe was organized, and in June following within its ranks The Pickwick Club for the purpose of covering the mysteries and membership of the Mistick Krewe.
The Elkin Club, named after Harvey Elkin, was founded in 1832 by a group of Harvey's friends who purchased "Elkinville" after Mr. Elkin encountered financial difficulty, these men included John Slidell, John Randolph Grymes, and Glendy Burke; and was the first official private social club in New Orleans. An open club, members could freely invite guests, it sponsored dances and balls in the vicinity of Bayou St John and closed officially in 1838, due to the financial crisis of 1837.
The Pelican Club was founded in 1843, from the remnants of The Elkin Club, and folded at the beginning of the Civil War, confined its membership through blackball policies to bankers, cotton brokers, attorneys, physicians, and political leaders; the smallest lapse in credit spelled denial of membership. It was to this club Henry Clay and Gen. Winfield Scott would retire for respite.
Younger gentlemen, who had been rejected membership to the Pelican Club, organized The Orleans Club in 1851 with less restrictive membership policies but similarly closed at the outset of the Civil War. A few members of this club would later found The Pickwick Club, the city's second-oldest gentleman's club, who would influence the development of modern-day Mardi Gras.[4]
The Pickwick, unlike the Boston Club, began as a "closed club," but evidence suggests before the turn of the 19th century the club allowed members to extend the club's hospitality to ladies and out-of-town guests during Carnival.
Notable members
- Lloyd Dulany Addison, Founding Member, Descended from Maryland Gentry Families such as the Lloyd's of Wye House, Dulaney's of Anne Arundel County, Maryland, and later Welbourne, and the Oxon Hill Manor Addison's.
- Adley H. Gladden, First President, was a lieutenant colonel and second commander of the Palmetto Regiment of South Carolina volunteers during the Mexican–American War and a brigadier general in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War.[5][6]
- Albert Walter Merriam was a lieutenant colonel in the Louisiana Confederate Military. He built and owned the Crescent Hall.[7][8]
- William J. Behan, was an American Confederate veteran and politician. He served as the 41st mayor of New Orleans (November 20, 1882 – April 28, 1884).[9]
- Edward Douglass White, American politician and jurist, was a United States Senator and the ninth Chief Justice of the United States. He served on the Supreme Court of the United States from 1894 to 1921. He is best known for formulating the Rule of reason standard of antitrust law.[10]
- Harry T. Hays was an American Army officer serving in the Mexican–American War and a general who served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War.[11]
- Paul Capdevielle was mayor of New Orleans, Louisiana, from May 9, 1900, to December 5, 1904.[12]
- Charles de Choiseul, Confederate States Army officer during the American Civil War serving under Harry T. Hays; son of Count Marie Joseph Gabriel St. Xavier de Choiseul, cousin to King Louis-Phillippe XV and French Consul in Charleston, SC, and Savannah, GA. Lawyer in New Orleans and a militiaman, active in the French Creole community.[13][14]
- Dr. Robert Tayloe Cook V, MD, FFV, of the Tayloe's of Mount Airy, VA and The Octagon, D.C. His great uncle, H. Tayloe, founded the Fair Grounds in 1838 with Mandeville de Marigny. Doctor of radiology at Baptist Hospital and past president of the Louisiana SNMMI.
Homes of The Pickwick Club
- Tchoupitoulas Street just above Poydras Street, 1857 – January 1858
- No. 57 St. Charles Street, just beyond Gravier Street, 1858–1865
- The corner of Canal and Exchange Alley Streets, 1865–1881
- 148 Canal Street (Today, 824 Canal Street-The Boston Club), 1881–1882
- The corner of Canal and Carondelet Streets, 1882–1894 "Pickwick Palace"
- Old No. 4 Carondolet, now 122, 1894–1899 (The Forstall Mansion)
- 1030 Canal Street 1899–1934
- Unknown 1934–1950
- The Crescent City Billiard Hall, corner of Canal St and St Charles Ave, 1950–present[15]
- Pickwick Club-House, 1030 Canal Street, New Orleans, LA. (1896)
- Pickwick Palace, Canal at Carondelet, 1882–1894
Gallery
- Pickwick Club Rules 1929
- Pickwick Club Rules 1929
- Pickwick Club Rules 1929
See also
References
- ↑ "Pickwickians and Reconstruction". pbs.org. Retrieved February 20, 2022.
- ↑ "10 Exclusive Places In New Orleans You'll Never Get Into - The Pickwick Club". Complex.com. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
- ↑ "A Multifaceted Gem : Known variously through the years as the Gem Coffee House, Café, Oyster House and Saloon, its origins are shrouded in mystery" (PDF). Neworleansbar.org. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
- ↑ New Orleans Carnival Krewes: The History, Spirit & Secrets of Mardi Gras, Rosary O'Neill, Arcadia Publishing, February 11, 2014.
- ↑ New Orleans Carnival Krewes: The History, Spirit & Secrets of Mardi Gras, Rosary O'Neill, Arcadia Publishing, February 11, 2014.
- ↑ "New Orleans CLUBS AND KINDRED ORGANIZATION - Historical Content".
- ↑ "New Orleans Carnival Balls: The Secret Side of Mardi Gras, 1870-1920". Jennifer Atkins, LSU Press, 2017.
- ↑ "Mardi Gras: Chronicles of the New Orleans Carnival". Errol Laborde, Pelican Publishing, 2013, p. 75.
- ↑ "Pickwickians and Reconstruction | American Experience | PBS". PBS.
- ↑ "Pickwickians and Reconstruction | American Experience | PBS". PBS.
- ↑ Lords of Misrule: Mardi Gras and the Politics of Race in New Orleans, James Gill, Univ. Press of Mississippi, 1997, p. 77
- ↑ Standard History of New Orleans, Louisiana: Giving a Description of the Natural Advantages, Natural History, Settlement, Indians, Creoles, Municipal and Military History, Mercantile and Commercial Interests, Banking, Transportation, Struggles Against High Water, the Press, Educational ..., Henry Rightor, Lewis Publishing Company, 1900
- ↑ Augusto P. Miceli, "The Pickwick Club of New Orleans"
- ↑ https://hendersonvillebest.com/notable-men-of-henderson-county-xavier-de-choiseul/
- ↑ New Orleans Nostalgia "Trouble, Right Here in the River City" Ned Hémard Copyright 2009