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The Columbia University Club was founded in 1901 by recent graduates of Columbia University. [4] The Club had 1,000 members in 1910. By the early 1970s, in need of capital, and down to less than 500 members, it sold the building to the Unification Church of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. [5]
The University Club of New York (also known as University Club) is a private social club at 1 West 54th Street and Fifth Avenue in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. Founded to celebrate the union of social duty and intellectual life, the club was chartered in 1865 for the "promotion of literature and art".
30 West 44th Street was constructed as the headquarters of the Yale Club of New York City. That club was established in 1897 to replace the Yale Alumni Association of New York, which had been established in 1868. [36] The Yale Club was initially headquartered at 17 East 26th Street, the former clubhouse of the Lambs Club.
University Club of New York: Manhattan: 1899: University Heights campus, New York University: The Bronx: 1891–1900: including Hall of Fame for Great Americans and Gould Memorial Library 1900, now site of Bronx Community College: Morningside Heights campus, Columbia University: Manhattan: 1893–1900
New York University New York Seniors, coeducational Rotunda Burning Society: c. 1981: University of Virginia Virginia [125] Rutherford B. Hayes Society: 1893 Ohio State University Ohio Undergraduate and graduate students [159] [160] Sachems: 1915 Columbia University New York Seniors St. Elmo Society: 1899 Yale University Connecticut Seniors [127]
President George W. Bush stopped by Rockaway Athletic Club, a popular local restaurant in Columbia, after he spoke before a joint session of the South Carolina General Assembly in Columbia, S.C ...
Columbia University is facing a full-blown crisis heading into Passover as a rabbi linked to the Ivy League school urged Jewish students to stay home and tense confrontations on campus sparked ...
This page includes all university clubs which is a club that restricts membership to members of a certain university or group of universities. Some are also listed as "gentlemen's clubs" and while there historically has been a fair amount of overlap, in many cases they do function somewhat differently today.