Brooks's: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Brooks.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Brooks's Club, London]]Brooks's (which is the correct spelling and punctuation!) was an exclusive gentlemen's | [[File:Brooks.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Brooks's Club, London]]Brooks's (which is the correct spelling and punctuation!) was an exclusive [[Gentlemen's Clubs|gentlemen's clubs]] in London and is located at 60 St James' Street. Brooks's was liberal, with a largely Whiggish membership. | ||
To become a member, a man must be proposed by a current member, and a system of black and white balls was used to vote on the prospective man's membership. A single black ball was enough to exclude him from becoming a member, giving rise to the term 'blackballed'. This system was not exclusive to Brooks's, being used in other clubs. | To become a member, a man must be proposed by a current member, and a system of black and white balls was used to vote on the prospective man's membership. A single black ball was enough to exclude him from becoming a member, giving rise to the term 'blackballed'. This system was not exclusive to Brooks's, being used in other clubs. |
Revision as of 03:44, 15 July 2016
Brooks's (which is the correct spelling and punctuation!) was an exclusive gentlemen's clubs in London and is located at 60 St James' Street. Brooks's was liberal, with a largely Whiggish membership.
To become a member, a man must be proposed by a current member, and a system of black and white balls was used to vote on the prospective man's membership. A single black ball was enough to exclude him from becoming a member, giving rise to the term 'blackballed'. This system was not exclusive to Brooks's, being used in other clubs.
Members
- Captain Arthur Cartwright, Royal Marines
- Benedict Delancey
- Patrick Grove
- Blake Pritchard, Marquess of Emerson
- Lord Gabriel Pritchard
- Commander Nathaniel Scarborough