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1883
 How it all began

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  1883 Correspondence

1884
 Opening and Early days

1890
 Next generation
 Who were the Ladies?
 Club life

1910
 An Edwardian Tennis Club

1914
 World War I

1920
 Getting LRC house in order

1930
 Enterprising Committees


1946
 Rebuilding after
World War II


1948
 LRC builds a
  swimming pool


1955
 Main Clubhouse with
  badminton court


1960
 Family Clubhouse




Colours
Badge and Motto


Charming
LRC History
written in 1960

Clubhouses

"B" pool and beyond

Memories

SPORT

Badminton

Cricket

Croquet

Tennis

Squash

Swimming

Ladies Rifle Association

Traditions

Gentlemen

Teas

Chits

Bridge

Cobbler

Neighbours

Gardening

Beauty Salon and Keep Fit

Lower Tennis Courts &
Albany Filter Beds

Histories

Membership trends

Other opinions of the LRC

Important LRC Dates


About



Ladies' Recreation Club
Historical Archive
1890s
Club Life

1895 - Rifle Brigade Chronicle

1896 - Music in the late evening

1899 - Tennis Tournament

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1902 - Croquet

Quite early on in the history of the Club, croquet became a popular game. Mr. H. J. Armstrong, in the speech he made on the occasion of the laying of the foundation stone of the new clubhouse in April 1955, mentions it:

"Court 3, the site of this clubhouse, was then a grass court big enough for croquet on which overdressed gentlemen in tight trousers and waistcoats, equally overdressed ladies in trailing skirts and large hats, battled their way through the hoops." His mother, besides her prowess at tennis, was also Croquet Champion in 1910.

Another old member, thinking back, mistakenly thought that the club was originally for croquet, although from the China Mail report of the opening, it is clear that tennis was the club's first purpose. However, it does show how important croquet must have been at one time.

Mention is also made by another past member of the many devotees of the game, but "for some reason unexplained, it was only ephemeral." A former member, Mr. P. Cassidy, mentions that "Mr. Paul Hodgson, in his straw boater, was the unexpected Croquet Champion for many years."


1904 - Mild Satire - "Betty"

 

Books

The L.R.C. - that is the Ladies' Recreation Club, or, as some read it, Ladies' Recrimination Club, is managed with great care by ladies. Gentlemen are eligible as subscribers.

"John Chinaman at Home: Sketches of Men, Manners and Things in China", Rev. E.J. Hardy, 1905

The cable tramway is a comparatively recent institution; In the morning the trams are crowded with European merchants, bankers, solicitors and their clerks, descending to their offices in the city. In the afternoon they are filled with the gay butterflies of society going up or down to pay calls, shop, or play tennis and croquet at the Ladies' Recreation Ground, half-way between the Peak and Victoria. The red coats of British soldiers are seen in the cars after parade hours or at night, when they are hurrying back to barracks before tattoo.

"The Land of the Boxers" by Gordon Casserly - 1910