Almack's Assembly Halls: Difference between revisions

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==Refreshments==
==Refreshments==
Refreshments were limited to thinly sliced bread with butter and dry cake, meaning without icing, not stale as modern sensibility has it. The only drinks served in the supper rooms were tea and lemonade, in order to avoid drunkenness and the rowdy behaviour that results. This was in order not to resemble private balls at which the suppers could be extremely lavish.
Refreshments were limited to thinly sliced bread with butter and dry cake, meaning without icing, not stale as modern sensibility has it. The only drinks served in the supper rooms were tea, lemonade, claret-cup (claret mixed with soda, fruit juice and sugar, occasionally also with brandy mixed in ) and orgeat (distilled from barley or almonds with orange flower water, considered to be a light refreshing drink), in order to avoid drunkenness and the rowdy behaviour that results. This was in order not to resemble private balls at which the suppers could be extremely lavish.


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 17:12, 11 February 2018

The exterior of Almack's on King Street, St. James

Almack's Assembly Rooms, also known as simply 'Almack's', was a social club on King Street in the St James area of London. It was among the very limited number of mixed-sex venues for the upper classes, and held balls every Wednesday evening. It is located just around the corner from Brooks's and Boodle's and a few minutes' walk from White's, the gentlemen's clubs along St James' Street.

Location of Almack's on the coloured in London Map

Entry Requirements

Entry to Almack's was by voucher only, at a cost of ten guineas each, and only those who had been presented at Court (or who, during the years when Court presentations were suspended, would have been presented) were eligible for vouchers, which were issued for a month at a time. If you did not have vouchers, that might simply mean that you had not applied for them, but if you had held them and had lost the privilege of buying them again, that meant that you had been found wanting - to lose one's vouchers was considered a disaster for those whose position in Society meant everything.

The doors were closed to new arrivals from eleven PM and if you had not arrived by then, you were not allowed in.

The dress code was very strict: Evening gowns and long gloves for the ladies and stockings, breeches, waistcoats, evening coats and gloves for the gentlemen. In 1814, the Duke of Wellington, the hero of the hour, was forbidden entry to Almack's when he arrived in trousers.

The Lady Patronesses

A Cruikshank watercolour showing the interior of Almack's in 1821

Almack's was governed by a select committee of highly influential ladies, who came to be known as the Patronesses, or Lady Patronesses. There were six or seven of these formidable ladies at any one time, and they were the final arbiters on who could and who could not purchase the vouchers required for entry to the Wednesday evening balls (the only events of any note that the club held).

The Lady Patronesses tastes when it came to dancing were conservative. Gentlemen were expected to dance, and unlike a private ball or informal family gathering, no partners of the same sex were allowed. Dances were limited to country dances and the waltz and quadrille were not danced at Almack's until quite late on - the dates are variously given as 1813, 1815 and 1816.

Refreshments

Refreshments were limited to thinly sliced bread with butter and dry cake, meaning without icing, not stale as modern sensibility has it. The only drinks served in the supper rooms were tea, lemonade, claret-cup (claret mixed with soda, fruit juice and sugar, occasionally also with brandy mixed in ) and orgeat (distilled from barley or almonds with orange flower water, considered to be a light refreshing drink), in order to avoid drunkenness and the rowdy behaviour that results. This was in order not to resemble private balls at which the suppers could be extremely lavish.

See Also

Jane Austen's World: Almack's Assembly Rooms and its Snobbish Patronesses
In Search of Almacks
Almack's on Wikipedia