The Club (dining club)
The Club or Literary Club is a London dining club founded in February 1764 by Joshua Reynolds, Samuel Johnson, and Edmund Burke.
Description
Initially, the Club would meet one evening per week at seven, at the Turk's Head Inn in Gerrard Street, Soho. Later, meetings were reduced to once per fortnight whilst Parliament was in session, and were held at rooms in St James's Street. Though the initial formation was proposed by Sir Joshua Reynolds, Dr. Samuel Johnson became the person most closely associated with the Club.John Timbs, in his Club Life in London, gives an account of the Club's centennial dinner in 1864, which was celebrated at the Clarendon hotel. Henry Hart Milman, the English historian, was treasurer. The Club's toast, no doubt employing a bit of wishful thinking, was "Esto perpetua", Latin for "Let it be perpetual". This Latin phrase traces its origin to the last dying declaration of Paolo Sarpi the Venetian theologian, philosopher and canon law expert who uttered these words towards the Venetian Republic, whose independence he devoutly espoused. The introduction of the phrase to Britain was probably through Sir Joshua Reynolds who went to Italy for his higher training in Renaissance art and painting with the contemporary Italian masters.
Members
The nine original members were:- Joshua Reynolds: artist
- Samuel Johnson: essayist, lexicographer
- Edmund Burke: writer, later M.P.
- Christopher Nugent
- Topham Beauclerk
- Bennet Langton
- Oliver Goldsmith: author, playwright, poet
- Anthony Chamier
- John Hawkins: author
It was intended the Club should consist of Such men, as that if only Two of them chanced to meet, they should be able to entertain each other without wanting the addition of more Company to pass the Evening agreeably.
Later member Charles Burney wrote that Johnson wanted a group "composed of the heads of every liberal and literary profession" and "have somebody to refer to in our doubts and discussions, by whose Science we might be enlightened."
The Club grew to 16 members in 1773, then to 21 in late 1775. Newly elected were: David Garrick, Adam Smith, Sir William Jones, George Steevens,, James Boswell, Charles James Fox, George Fordyce, James Caulfeild, 1st Earl of Charlemont, Agmondesham Vesey, Sir Thomas Charles Bunbury, Edward Gibbon, and Thomas Barnard.
By 1783 the number had risen again to 35, including several Whig politicians, so that Johnson and other older members began to attend dinners less frequently. Johnson even founded another club, the Essex Head Club. A fact often neglected was that when the Club was founded, Edmund Burke had already founded a successful political and debating society, Edmund Burke's Club, whilst still a student at Trinity College, Dublin. It has been suggested that the Club was initially no more than a kind of friendship club, initiated by Joshua Reynolds to help the lonely Dr Samuel Johnson. But it was no doubt Burke who pushed for the idea of a Club rather than just a circle of friends, and it was his personality that had the greater influence; hence the increasingly political nature of the Club in the next century.
By 1791, eight years after the death of Johnson, the membership recorded by James Boswell included:
- Lord Charlemont
- Bishop Thomas Percy
- Charles Fox
- George Fordyce
- Joseph Banks
- Edward Gibbon
- Joseph Warton
- Lord Spencer
- Lord Palmerston
19th century
The historian Henry Reeve recorded details of Club membership in his diaries.Members in the 1800s included:
- George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen
- Henry Petty-FitzMaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne
- Charles Eastlake
- Henry Brougham, 1st Baron Brougham and Vaux
- Philip Stanhope, 5th Earl Stanhope
- Henry Hart Milman
- Sir Henry Holland
- William Whewell
- Charles Austin
- Thomas Pemberton Leigh, 1st Baron Kingsdown
- George Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon
- Richard Owen
- Sylvain Van de Weyer
- Sir David Dundas
- Harry Powlett, 4th Duke of Cleveland
- Samuel Wilberforce
- Samuel Jones-Loyd, 1st Baron Overstone
- George Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll
- Robert Rolfe, 1st Baron Cranworth
- Sir William Stirling-Maxwell
- William Gladstone
- John Russell, 1st Earl Russell
- George Grote,
- Edward Stanley, Lord Stanley
- William Wood, 1st Baron Hatherley
- George Richmond
- Archibald Campbell Tait
- Henry Reeve
- Roderick Murchison
- Edmund Walker Head
- Robert Lowe, 1st Viscount Sherbrooke
- Spencer Walpole
- Arthur Penrhyn Stanley
- James Anthony Froude
- Henri d'Orléans, duc d'Aumale
- Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson
- Hugh Cairns, 1st Earl Cairns
- Edward Twisleton
- Charles Thomas Newton
- Joseph Dalton Hooker
- Matthew Arnold
- Joseph Boehm
- Edward Maunde Thompson
- William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin