Samuel Pepys Club
The Samuel Pepys Club is a London club founded in 1903 to do honour to the memory of Samuel Pepys, the English naval administrator and Member of Parliament now best known as a diarist.
Origin
On 26 May 1903, at the Garrick Club in London, a group of four men interested at various degrees in Samuel Pepys met together over dinner to celebrate the exact bicentenary of the death of the diarist. They were:- Sir Frederick Bridge, organist of Westminster Abbey and author of Samuel Pepys, Lover of Musique published the same year;
- Sir D'Arcy Power, surgeon and medical writer, author of The Medical History of Mr and Mrs Samuel Pepys published in 1895 in The Lancet;
- George Whale, solicitor and bibliophile;
- Henry B. Wheatley, indexer and editor of the third edition of the Diary published between 1894 and 1899.
Evolution and activities
The first president was Henry B. Wheatley, assisted by his brother Benjamin R. Wheatley acting as secretary, and by Sir D'Arcy Power as treasurer.In 1953, fifty years after its foundation, the Club established an executive committee charged with the general conduct of the affairs. It includes four officers, eight elected members, and four ex-officio members. Since 1985, the president of the Club has been John Montagu, 11th Earl of Sandwich.
The Club has no fixed club house nor building. Its meetings and dinners are held in diverse venues in and around London.
Besides the annual dinner usually held in October in one of the many livery halls of London, St Olave Hart Street, in co-ordination with the Samuel Pepys Club, holds a Pepys Commemoration Service each year in May, as close as possible to the anniversary of his death on 26 May. An invited speaker gives an address on some aspect of Pepys's life. Recent subjects have included: Pepys's Musical World, Pepys and Trinity House, and Pepys and St Paul's School.
Several outings to Pepysian places of interest are also organised round the year.
Membership
The Club initially aimed at bringing together those who had made significant academic contributions to Pepysian studies, and the initial membership was restricted to 50. Due to demand, this number was rapidly increased to 70, Pepys's age when he died. The first female member was elected in 1952.Membership was extended in 2003 to 140 UK members, plus 14 overseas members. Anyone with a genuine personal interest in Pepys and his times qualifies for election on proposal by an existing member, and upon approval by the executive committee. Membership is eclectic, ranging from bishops, historians, navy officers, and writers, to lawyers, surgeons, and academics.
Honorary ex-officio members are:
- The High Master of St Paul's School ;
- The Master of Magdalene College ;
- The Pepys Librarian ;
- The 2nd Permanent Under-Secretary of State for Defence ;
- The Rector of St Olave Hart Street ;
- The Treasurer of Christ's Hospital ;
- The Deputy Master of the Corporation of Trinity House ;
- The Master of The Worshipful Company of Clothworkers ;
- The President of the Royal Society ;
- and The Chairman of C. Hoare & Co.
''Samuel Pepys Award''