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The club remained in Hanover Square until 1961. The club house there was in use for the last time on 30 November 1961. [26] Early in 1962, the club moved into its present club house, Stratford House in Stratford Place, just off Oxford Street, London W1C, having bought the property for conversion in 1960. [5] [27]
Oriental Club: 1824 Stratford House, Stratford Place 1962 Founded for members of the East India Company; now social Since 2010 Oxford and Cambridge Club (called the United Oxford and Cambridge Club, 1971–2001) 1821 (United University Club); 1830 (Oxford and Cambridge Club); 1971 (merged club) 71–76 Pall Mall: 1837
Stratford House. Stratford House was built as the London town house of the Stratford family between 1770 and 1776 for Edward Stratford, 2nd Earl of Aldborough, who paid £4,000 for the site. [1] The central range was designed by Robert Adam. It had previously been the location of the Lord Mayor of London's Banqueting House, built in 1565. [1]
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Stratford House (Stony Stratford), a Grade II listed house in Stony Stratford, Milton Keynes, built in the early 18th century. Stratford House (Leeds), a Grade II listed house in Leeds, built in the early 19th century, now home to the Serbian National Centre Social Club; Stratford House (Dumfries and Galloway), a Category C listed house built ...
To house the workers for these factories, the Company of Carpenters built rows of Victorian terraced houses between Carpenters Road and the neighbouring town centre of Stratford. [1] The Company made efforts to improve the lives of the area's employees and residents, including the creation of a school and a social club. [1]
The refounded club now has regular meetings at the Savile Club and the Oriental Club and has recently resumed its traditional annual activities, including a snooker match and cricket match with the Savile Club. The revived club has registered the words "Eccentric Club", "Nil Nisi Bonum" and the old club logo as own trademarks. [13]
The Stratford Dialectical and Radical Club was a late nineteenth-century radical club based in Stratford, East London.Founded in 1880 by disaffected members of the National Secular Society who wished their organisation would involve itself in the social and political issues of the day rather than merely argue against the existence of God, it became one of the first openly socialist societies ...