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Piedmont Driving Club in 1938. The Piedmont Driving Club (previously the Gentlemen's Driving Club) is a private social club with two club houses in Atlanta, Georgia.. Founded in 1887 originally as the Gentlemen's Driving Club, the name reflected the interest of the members to "drive" their horse and carriages on the club grounds.
The Dalton Club (1898) Plymouth. The Old Colony Club (1769), third oldest existing gentlemen's club in the United States (behind the South River Club and the Schuylkill Fishing Company) [240] [241] Quincy. The Neighborhood Club (1916) [242] [243] Springfield. The Colony Club (1915–2018) [244] [245] Worcester. The Worcester Club (1888) [246]
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The first club house was located at 43 Walton Street. [3] In August 1884, the club moved to a new establishment at 114 Peachtree Street. [3] The Club presently operates three facilities for the use of its members, the oldest of which, the downtown Atlanta club building on John Portman Blvd., was dedicated on December 16, 1911.
Located in Buckhead, Atlanta, Tongue & Groove is the longest running nightclub and lounge in Atlanta. [1] Originally opened at Buckhead Village in 1994, the nightclub relocated in 2007 to its current Buckhead location, just off of Piedmont Road. The venue regularly hosts events and features musical guests from around the world.
In the late 1920s the club moved to Ponce de Leon Avenue in Midtown Atlanta. The site was later acquired by its neighbors, the Yaarab Shrine temple. In the late 1940s, new quarters opened near Brookhaven, in what is now the Lenox Park business park [1] and was located there until 1983, when Atlanta Inc. and Technology Park redeveloped the land. [2]
Social life in London has long revolved around members-only clubs such as Annabel’s or 5 Hertford Street, but the concept has largely been foreign in New York. Yet private clubs are on the rise ...
Later tenants included the "Gypsy Club" (c. 1951–1954), and "The Continental Room" (1954) before returning to the Anchorage name from about 1956 until 1963, when it was briefly known as the "Atlanta Playboy Club", an unofficial attempt to capitalize on the popularity of Hugh Hefner's magazine. A lawsuit closed the Atlanta Playboy Club.