Bullingdon Club
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bullingdon Club is a socially exclusive student drinking society at Oxford University, without any permanent rooms, infamous for its members' wealth and destructive binges. Membership is by invitation only, and prohibitively expensive for most.
The Bullingdon Club was founded over 150 years ago, originally as a hunting and cricket club, as the club's crest shows.[1] It now exists primarily as a dining club with a vestige of hunting in the support of the point to point. The club traditionally meets for an annual breakfast at the Bullingdon point to point, and a club dinner, as well as smaller initiation dinners, before which the rooms of new members are wrecked.
Members traditionally dress for their annual dinner in specially made tailcoats in royal blue with ivory silk lapel facings, brass monogrammed buttons, and a mustard waistcoat.
Its modus operandi is to book a private dining room under an assumed name, then physically destroy it. Very large amounts of cash are then offered to the owners to pay them off for the destruction.
Contents |
[edit] The Club in fiction
The Bullingdon is satirised in Evelyn Waugh's novel Decline and Fall (1928), where it has a pivotal role in the plot: The mild-mannered hero gets the blame for the Bollinger Club's destructive rampage through his college and is sent down. Tom Driberg claimed that the description of the Bollinger Club was a "mild account of the night of any Bullingdon Club dinner in Christ Church. Such a profusion of glass I never saw until the height of the Blitz. On such nights, any undergraduate who was believed to have 'artistic' talents was an automatic target."[1]
Waugh likely also had the Bullingdon in mind in the meeting of the two principal characters in Brideshead Revisited, when after a drunken society dinner Sebastian Flyte vomits through the window of Charles Ryder's college room. Anthony Andrews, who played Lord Sebastian Flyte, and his group wore the famous Bullingdon tails on the 1981 TV adaptation.
[edit] Notable members
Members of the club have included:
- David Cameron, MP
- Alan Clark, MP
- David Dimbleby, broadcaster
- David Faber, MP
- Darius Guppy
- Boris Johnson, MP
- Harry Mount
- George Osborne, MP
- Nathaniel Philip Rothschild[2]
- Radosław Sikorski
- The 7th Marquess of Bath
[edit] References
- ^ Carpenter, Humphrey. The Brideshead Generation: Evelyn Waugh and his Friends, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1989.
- ^ Thomas, Landon Jr. "The Man Who May Become the Richest Rothschild." The New York Times, 9 March 2007.
[edit] External links
- "Oxford hellraisers politely trash a pub", The Daily Telegraph, Richard Alleyne, 3 December 2004
- "[2]" Photograph of David Cameron's Bullingdon club, 1987.
- "Cameron Student Photo is Banned", BBC News, 2 March 2007. More details of David Cameron's Bullingdon Club.