Union Jack Club
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2020) |
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c8/Union_Jack_Club_-_a.jpg/220px-Union_Jack_Club_-_a.jpg)
The Union Jack Club is an Armed Forces Club in central
The club's main entrance is in Sandell Street off Waterloo Road, opposite Waterloo station. Many guest bedrooms on the upper floors have views over London.
History
The idea for the club came from Ethel McCaul, a Royal Red Cross nurse who served in field hospitals during the South African War at the start of the 20th century. She noted that while officers enjoyed membership of various gentlemen's clubs in London, no equivalent existed for enlisted personnel and they therefore used
The initial sum of £60,000 was raised at various galas and functions. Any donor giving £100 could name a room.
Ethel McCaul was adamant that her brave servicemen and their families should have somewhere to stay at no more of a cost than one day’s pay. Waterloo seemed the obvious place as this was the principal railhead leading to the ports and garrisons which served the Empire. The Union Jack Club was to be built as a National Memorial to those who had fallen in the South African War. The Union Jack Club naturally found itself in great demand during both World Wars and its resources were fully stretched, with the Union Jack Club growing from 208 bedrooms in 1904 to a total of 800 beds in 1939. For many years after the First World War an annual donation was sent anonymously to the Union Jack Club and with each payment came a note with the words “In gratitude for a scrap of comfort”. The words of this anonymous donor are today commemorated by a marble plaque sited in the Reception Area.
During the
In 2004,
There are a number of points of historical interest throughout the Union Jack Club, such as the Victoria Cross and George Cross boards, which are the only known commemoration of their kind to all those who have earned the Victoria Cross and George Cross.
Since its opening in 1907, the Union Jack Club has seen over 21 million people stay at the Club and it continues to remain active.[citation needed]
References
- ^ The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh help celebrate the centenary of the Union Jack Club, www.royal.gov.uk, 3 December 2004.
- ^ London SE1 — Queen visits Union Jack Club, www.london-se1.co.uk, 3 December 2004.