Vincent's Club
![]() The front door of Vincent's Club  | |
| Formation | 1863 | 
|---|---|
| Location | 
  | 
| Coordinates | 51°45′08″N 1°15′18″W / 51.7522°N 1.2549°W | 
| Membership | Oxford Blues (predominantly) | 
President  | Tom Barrett | 
| Website | www | 
Vincent's Club, popularly known as Vinnie's, is a private members' club in Oxford. The club's membership consists predominantly, but not exclusively, of sporting blues of the University of Oxford.[1]
History
Vincent's Club was founded in 1863 by oarsman Walter Bradford Woodgate[2] of Brasenose College, Oxford, who became the first president of the club.[3] Dissatisfied with the permissive admission policies and lack of refreshments at the Oxford Union,[3][4] Woodgate established his own club and stated that it "should consist of the picked hundred of the University, selected for all-round qualities; social, physical and intellectual qualities being duly considered."[5]
Vincent's Club quickly gained considerable prestige, which it enjoys to this day.[1] J.S.G. Pemberton regarded it as "the premier Social Club of the University",[6] while in 1894 The Isis could describe Vincent's as "a sacred Temple ... to those whom, by virtue of themselves, their athletic powers, and their social and general good-fellowship, a grateful University delighteth to honour", with membership considered to be "the diploma which the University of Undergraduates grants in due season to her most successful and deserving sons".[7]
Roger Bannister, president of the club in 1950, celebrated at Vincent's after running the world's first sub-four-minute mile at the Iffley Road track in 1954.[8] The Beatles visited the club in 1964.[9][10]
Membership
From the club's foundation, influenced by Woodgate's own sporting interests, the membership has been dominated by sportspeople. However, there has never been a sporting qualification for membership and membership does not accompany a Blue.[11] The club was originally limited to only 100 resident members, but as the university has expanded, so too has the club.[12]
Members must be enrolled at the University of Oxford at the time of their election, but remain members for life.[12] The club's constitution was amended to enable the admission of women as members on 9 March 2016.[13]
Clubhouse
The club was originally located in the old reading rooms which J. H. Vincent, a printer, had previously kept at 90 High Street.[14] Between 1894 and 1931, the club occupied premises at 6-7 High Street.[15]
Since 1931, the club has been located at 1A King Edward Street, in upstairs premises above Shepherd & Woodward on the High Street in central Oxford. Completely refurbished in 2014,[16] the club's facilities include a bar, lounge area, dining room, conference room, kitchen and administrative offices.[17]
Club regalia
Vincent’s members are entitled to wear the club tie, which is dark blue with a white crown motif, or a silver crown lapel pin. The club tie, adopted in 1926,[4] is particularly renowned and was regarded by J.C. Masterman as "a sort of passport all over the English-speaking world".[12]
Notable members[18]
Royalty:
- King Edward VII of the United Kingdom
 - King Edward VIII of the United Kingdom
 - King Harald V of Norway, world champion sailor
 - King Olav V of Norway, Olympic Gold 1928
 - Nawab Iftikhar Ali Khan of Pataudi, Indian prince, India cricket captain and England cricket international
 - Emperor Naruhito of Japan (Honorary Member)
 
Politics & Law:
- Tony Abbott, Prime Minister of Australia
 - Sir George Abell, civil servant
 - Sir Anthony Acland, British diplomat and Provost of Eton College
 - Michael Beloff KC, barrister and President of Trinity College, Oxford
 - Bill Bradley, NBA player and US Senator, Olympic Gold 1964
 - Sir Robin Butler, Cabinet Secretary and Master of University College, Oxford
 - Bill Cash, MP
 - Randolph Churchill, MP and son of Winston Churchill
 - Lord Desborough, MP, President of the Amateur Fencing Association, President of Marylebone Cricket Club and President of the Lawn Tennis Association
 - Lord Curzon, Viceroy of India, Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of Oxford University
 - Alec Douglas-Home, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
 - Bob Hawke, Prime Minister of Australia
 - John Gorton, Prime Minister of Australia
 - Roger Gifford, Lord Mayor of London
 - Sir Jeremy Greenstock, diplomat
 - Sir Edward Grey, UK Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of Oxford University
 - Melville Guest, diplomat
 - Harold Macmillan, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Honorary Member)
 - Sir John Masterman, spymaster, Provost of Worcester College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University
 - Lord Milligan, Scottish judge and politician
 - Colin Moynihan, Olympic Silver 1980, MP and Olympic administrator
 - Viscount Monckton, lawyer and Defence Secretary
 - Philip Moore, Private Secretary to Queen Elizabeth II and England rugby international
 - Airey Neave, MP and soldier
 - Ossie Newton-Thompson, member of the South African parliament, England rugby international and winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross
 - Lord Oaksey, lead British judge at the Nuremberg trials
 - Katsuhiko Oku, diplomat
 - Lord Porritt, Olympic Bronze 1924, military surgeon and Governor-General of New Zealand
 - Cecil Rhodes, Prime Minister of the Cape Colony and mining magnate
 - Sir Ivor Roberts, UK Ambassador to Yugoslavia, Ireland, and Italy and President of Trinity College, Oxford
 - Earl of Roseberry, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
 - Sir Mark Sedwill, Cabinet Secretary and United Kingdom National Security Adviser
 - Edwyn Scudamore-Stanhope, peer and courtier
 - Montague Shearman, judge and co-founder of the Amateur Athletics Association
 - Whitney Shepardson, head of the Secret Intelligence Branch of the Office of Strategic Services
 - William Stevenson, Olympic Gold 1924, founding partner of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, president of Oberlin College and US ambassador to the Philippines
 - Frederic Thesiger, Viceroy of India, Governor of New South Wales, Governor of Queensland, First Lord of the Admiralty and Warden of All Souls College, Oxford
 - Sir John Weston, diplomat
 
Military:
- Sir Brian Burnett, Royal Air Force air chief marshal and Chairman of the All England Lawn Tennis Club
 - Robin Bourne-Taylor, British Olympic rower, Life Guards officer and winner of the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross
 - Noel Chavasse VC & Bar, Olympic athlete and twice winner of the Victoria Cross
 - Lord David Craig, Marshal of the Royal Air Force and Chief of the Defence Staff
 - Pete Dawkins, Rhodes Scholar, Heisman Trophy winner, US Army brigadier general and business executive
 - James Glancy, Royal Marines and Special Boat Service (SBS) officer, winner of the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross, wildlife conservationist, film maker and Member of the European Parliament
 - Sir Edmund Herring, Australian Army lieutenant general, Lieutenant Governor of Victoria and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria
 - Roger Kimpton, winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross
 - Jock Lewes, co-founder of the Special Air Service (SAS) and Welsh Guards officer
 - Sir Tommy Macpherson, winner of three Military Crosses
 - Robert Nairac, Grenadier Guards and military intelligence officer
 - Sir John Rawlins, Royal Navy Surgeon Vice Admiral
 - Sir Michael Rose, British Army general, commanding officer of the Special Air Service (SAS) and Commander United Nations Protection Force
 - Arnold Strode-Jackson, Olympic Gold 1912 and British Army general officer
 - Wilfred Thesiger, military officer, explorer and writer
 - Richard Wakeford VC, winner of the Victoria Cross
 - Geoffrey Woolley VC, infantry officer, military chaplain and winner of the Victoria Cross
 - Melvin "Dinghy" Young, twice winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross and second in command of Operation Chastise
 
Academic:
- Sir John Bell, Regius Professor of Medicine at the University of Oxford
 - Lord Blake, historian and Provost of The Queen's College, Oxford
 - Lord Butterfield, Regius Professor of Physic at the University of Cambridge, Master of Downing College, Cambridge and Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University
 - John Dossetor, pioneering physician and bioethicist
 - Sir Keith Feiling, Chichele Professor of Modern History at All Souls College, Oxford
 - Robin Fletcher, Olympic Bronze 1952, Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford and Warden of Rhodes House, Oxford
 - Gathorne Robert Girdlestone, pioneering orthopaedic surgeon
 - Sir John Hood, businessman and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University
 - Frederick L. Hovde, president of Purdue University
 - Arthur Johnson, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford and FA Cup winner
 - Sir Colin Lucas, Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University and Chair of the Board of the British Library
 - Sir Terence Morrison-Scott, zoologist, Director of the Science Museum and the British Museum (Natural History)
 - Francis Pember, Warden of All Souls College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University
 - Professor Graham Richards, head of the Department of Chemistry at Oxford University
 - Felix Stephens, Benedictine monk and Master of St Benet's Hall, Oxford
 - Sir Harold Thompson, Fellow of St John's College, Oxford and chairman of The FA
 - Alan Valentine, Olympic Gold 1924, academic, president of the University of Rochester and Marshall Plan official
 - Hugh Ward, bacteriologist and winner of the Military Cross
 - Sir Francis Wylie, the first Warden of Rhodes House, Oxford
 
Religion:
- Walter Carey, international rugby player and Bishop of Bloemfontein
 - Edward Carr Glyn, Bishop of Peterborough
 - Hartwell de la Garde Grissell, papal chamberlain and founder of the Oxford University Newman Society
 - William Heard, cardinal
 - Cosmo Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury
 - Nicholas Stacey, priest and social activist
 - Andrew Wingfield Digby, sports chaplain
 
Business:
- Gerry Cardinale, businessman and investor
 - Etienne de Villiers, investor and business executive
 - Sir Rod Eddington, business executive
 - Ivan Gazidis, former CEO of Arsenal F.C. and AC Milan
 - Jason Gissing, founder of Ocado
 - Sir Christopher Hogg, business executive
 - Jim Rogers, investor and financial commentator
 - Julian Ogilvie Thompson, chairman of De Beers and Anglo American
 - Lord Charles Williams, business executive and life peer
 
Arts:
- Lord Jeffrey Archer, novelist and politician
 - John Buchan, author and Governor General of Canada
 - John Galsworthy, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
 - Kris Kristofferson, Grammy Award-winning singer and Golden Globe-winning actor
 - Lord Palumbo, chairman of the Arts Council of Great Britain
 
Media:
- James Allen, Formula 1 journalist
 - Sir Christopher Bland, businessman and Chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC
 - John Bryant, editor of The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph
 - Tim Hetherington, photojournalist
 - Marmaduke Hussey, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC
 - Walter Isaacson, author, professor, CEO of the Aspen Institute, chair of CNN and editor of Time
 - Norris McWhirter, co-founder of Guinness World Records and The Freedom Association
 - Ross McWhirter, co-founder of Guinness World Records
 - Dan Snow, historian and broadcaster
 - John Woodcock, cricket writer
 
Sportspeople:
- A. G. G. Asher, Scottish rugby and cricket international
 - Jimmy Allan, Scottish cricket international
 - David McLaren Bain, Scotland rugby captain
 - Sir Roger Bannister, first to run the sub-4-minute mile, neurologist and Master of Pembroke College, Oxford
 - Stuart Barnes, England rugby international and commentator
 - Tommy Bedford, South Africa rugby captain
 - Robin Benson, FA Cup winner, merchant banker and art collector
 - Bernard Bosanquet, international cricketer and inventor of the googly
 - Marshall Brooks, England rugby international and world record holder for the high jump
 - Charles Burnell, Olympic Gold 1908
 - Richard Burnell, Olympic Gold 1948
 - Donald Carr, England cricket international and cricket administrator
 - Herbert Hayton Castens, captained South Africa at both rugby and cricket
 - Christopher Chataway, athlete and politician
 - Troy Coker, Australian rugby international and winner of the 1991 Rugby World Cup
 - Oliver Cook, world champion rower
 - Jerry Cornes, Olympic Silver 1932
 - Lord Colin Cowdrey, England cricket captain, first President of the International Cricket Council and President of Marylebone Cricket Club
 - Phillip Crowe, Australian rugby international
 - Phil de Glanville, England rugby captain
 - Barnabé Delarze, Swiss Olympic rower
 - Peter Dixon, England rugby international
 - Sandy Duncan, Olympic administrator
 - Hugh "Jumbo" Edwards, two Olympic Golds 1932 and Royal Air Force group captain
 - Mark Evans, Olympic Gold 1984
 - Mike Evans, Olympic Gold 1984
 - Jonathan Fellows-Smith, South African cricket international
 - R. E. Foster, England cricket and football captain
 - C. B. Fry, England cricket and football international, world record holder for the long jump
 - Angus Groom, Olympic Silver 2020
 - Simon Halliday, England rugby international
 - David Hemery, Olympic Gold 1968
 - Bob Hiller, England rugby international
 - Ewart Horsfall, Olympic Gold 1912, winner of the Military Cross and Distinguished Flying Cross
 - Malcolm Howard, Olympic Gold 2008
 - Andrew "Sandy" Irvine, mountaineer
 - Douglas Jardine, England cricket captain
 - Manon Johnes, Wales women's rugby international
 - Derek Johnson, Olympic Silver 1956
 - Abdul Kardar, first Pakistan cricket captain
 - F. S. Kelly, Olympic Gold 1908, musician and composer
 - Alister Kirby, Olympic Gold 1912
 - David Kirk, All Blacks captain and winner of the 1987 Rugby World Cup
 - Ronald Lagden, England rugby international
 - Chris Laidlaw, All Blacks international and politician
 - H. D. G. Leveson Gower, England cricket captain
 - Constantine Louloudis, Olympic Gold 2016
 - Jack Lovelock, Olympic Gold 1936
 - Donald MacDonald, Scottish rugby international
 - Dugald MacDonald, Springboks rugby international
 - Hugo MacNeill, Irish rugby international
 - Phil Macpherson, Scottish rugby international
 - Selwyn Maister, Olympic Gold 1976
 - Nick Mallett, South African rugby international and coach
 - Craig Masback, American middle distance runner, commentator and business executive
 - Alan Melville, South African cricket international
 - Adrian Metcalfe, Olympic Silver 1964 and commentator
 - Brendan Mullin, Irish rugby international
 - Patrick Munro, Scottish rugby international and politician
 - Thomas Nelson, Scottish rugby international
 - Charles Nepean, FA Cup winner
 - Guy Nickalls, Olympic Gold 1908
 - Prince Alexander Obolensky, England rugby international
 - Anton Oliver, All Blacks international
 - Tiger Pataudi, India cricket captain
 - Tony Pawson, cricketer, football and leading fly fisherman
 - Malcolm Phillips, England rugby international and President of the Rugby Football Union
 - Sir Matthew Pinsent, Olympic Golds 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004
 - Rosemary Popa, Olympic Gold 2020
 - William Rawson, England football international and FA Cup winner
 - Pete Reed, Olympic Golds 2008, 2012, 2016 and Royal Navy officer
 - Brett Robinson, Australian rugby international and Chair of World Rugby
 - Joe Roff, Australian rugby international and 1991 Rugby World Cup winner
 - Alan Rotherham, England rugby captain and member of the IRB Hall of Fame
 - Bevil Rudd, Olympic Gold 1920 and winner of the Military Cross
 - Richard Sharp, England rugby captain
 - G. O. Smith, England football captain
 - Brian Smith, Australia and Ireland rugby international
 - M. J. K. Smith, England cricket captain and rugby international
 - Peter Stagg, Scotland and Zambia rugby international
 - Nigel Starmer-Smith, England rugby international
 - Davis Tarwater, Olympic Gold 2012
 - Cyril Tolley, British amateur golf champion
 - Daniel Topolski, rowing world champion, coach and commentator
 - Victor Ubogu, England rugby international
 - Pieter van der Bijl, South African cricket international
 - Clive van Ryneveld, South Africa cricket and England rugby international
 - Harry Vassall, England rugby international
 - Walpole Vidal, England football international, played in the first ever international football match and FA Cup winner
 - Michael Walford, Olympic Silver 1948
 - Frank Willan, rower and co-founder of the Royal Yachting Association
 - John Young, England rugby international
 
See also
- Hawks' Club, the closest equivalent members' club for sportsmen at the University of Cambridge
 - University Pitt Club, private members' club open to students at the University of Cambridge
 - The Gridiron Club, dining club open to students at the University of Oxford
 
References
- ^ a b Lack, Alastair (11 December 2009). "'Once a member, always a member'". Oxford Mail.
 - ^ Michael G. Brock and M. C. Curthoys, The History of the University of Oxford, Volume 7, Part 2. Oxford University Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0-19-951017-7. Page 536.
 - ^ a b W. B. Woodgate, Reminiscences of an old sportsman, Vincent's Club, Oxford, UK.
 - ^ a b A Happy Breed of Men, Oxford Mail
 - ^ Hibbert, Christopher (1988). "Vincent's Club". The Encyclopaedia of Oxford. London: Macmillan. pp. 483−484. ISBN 978-0-333-39917-0.
 - ^ J. S. G. Pemberton, 'The social life', in J. Wells (ed.), Oxford and Oxford Life (1892), 91
 - ^ M. C. Curthoys, M. G. Brock (eds.). The History of the University of Oxford: Volume VII: Nineteenth-Century Oxford, Part 2. (2000). United Kingdom: Clarendon Press. 536.
 - ^ Bannister, Roger (2015). Twin Tracks: The Autobiography. The Robson Press. ISBN 9781849548366.
 - ^ Razzall, Tim (2014). Chance Encounters: Tales from a Varied Life. Biteback Publishing. ISBN 9781849548205.
 - ^ "BBC - Oxford Features - Secret Oxford". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
 - ^ E. W. Swanton, An Oxford Institution, Vincent's Club, Oxford, UK.
 - ^ a b c J. C. Masterman, Vincent's Club, Vincent's Club, Oxford, UK.
 - ^ Kodsi, Daniel (18 March 2016). "Vincent's Club ends gender exclusivity". Cherwell. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
 - ^ "The High, Oxford: No 90". www.oxfordhistory.org.uk. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
 - ^ "The High, Oxford: 6-7". www.oxfordhistory.org.uk. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
 - ^ "Club Refurbishments". Vincent's Club. 30 September 2021. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
 - ^ "Vincent's Club | Conference Oxford". conference-oxford.com. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
 - ^ Lee, Simon (2014). Vincent's 1863-2013. London: Third Millennium Information. ISBN 978 1 908990 33 4.
 

