City Club of New York
The City Club of New York is a New York City-based independent, not-for-profit organization.
In 1950, The New York Times called the City Club of New York "a social club with a civic purpose" whose members "fought for adequate water supply, the extension of rapid transit lines, lower costs of foreclosure in private homes, and the merit system in civil service, ... traffic relief, the prevention of juvenile delinquency." The City Club claimed that it inspired the creation of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and also fought for minimum wage laws, city parks, and playground programs.
For 30 years the City Club of New York administered the Albert S. Bard Award for Distinguished Architecture and Urban Design, which not only conferred honors on top city buildings but also used the occasion to comment on the state of municipal architecture in general.
History
The City Club was founded as a gentlemen's club in March 1892 by a group of 23 men, including such prominent names as August Belmont, Jr., James C. Carter, John Jay Chapman, R. Fulton Cutting, W. Bayard Cutting, Charles DeKay, George C. Magoun, George Haven Putnam, and John Woodruff Simpson. Spurred by international law expert Edmond Kelly, their mission was to:The first club president was James C. Carter. The group first met as a club in June 1892 at a dinner of about 200 men at Sherry's. Membership soon grew to about 350 men.
The City Club's first target was Tammany Hall; they helped the Lexow Committee probe into police corruption, and worked to elect William Lafayette Strong in 1895 as the reform mayor of New York. In 1897 the City Club helped organize the Citizens Union. Their activities were closely documented by The New York Times.
In 1913 the City Club commissioned a large boulder to commemorate the burial site of Captain Thomas Willett, the first English mayor of New York, at Little Neck Cemetery, East Providence, Rhode Island. By the 1920s the City Club was advocating on behalf of making the city safer in areas like urban planning and transportation; they also expanded their advocacy to the State of New York as a whole. They published an annual "Murder Map," documenting the deaths of children due to traffic accidents and other unsafe urban conditions. In May 1937 the City Club bestowed its first annual "Citation for Meritorious Service" to New York City Parks Commissioner Robert Moses.
Despite their earlier commendation of Robert Moses' work, as time moved on the club opposed many of Moses' plans for the development of New York City: it successfully organized opposition to the Brooklyn-Battery Bridge project and was instrumental in the preservation of Castle Clinton. In the late 1930s and early 1940s lawyer and civic activist Albert S. Bard exercised his influence in civic and urban affairs through his work on City Club committees. The Albert S. Bard Award was later named in his honor. The City Club celebrated its 50th anniversary in May 1942; among those in attendance were New York City Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia, New York State Lieutenant Governor Charles Poletti, and former Governor Al Smith.
From 1962–1997, the City Club hosted roundtable luncheons, held every Friday except during the summer. Invited speakers made presentations before the City Club. The luncheon presentations were aired live by WNYC-AM until 1987, when the station instead taped the luncheons and aired them during off-peak hours.
The City Club caused controversy In 1967 in a strongly worded article by activist Chairman I. D. Robbins about the perceived failures of the John Lindsay administration, particularly in regard to housing. Some club members objected to the article, asserting that it did not represent the official City Club position. Robbins offered to resign but was not allowed to.
In 1973, the City Club of New York celebrated its 80th anniversary with a gala dinner at the New York Hilton. Attendees included New York Mayor John Lindsay and former Mayor Robert F. Wagner. At the gala, the City Club handed out 23 "For New York" awards to citizens who dedicated themselves to bettering the city. Recipients included John Chancellor, Walter Cronkite, Lloyd Goodrich, Ada Louise Huxtable, Willie Mays, Arthur Mitchell, Bess Myerson, John Bertram Oakes, Joseph Papp, I. M. Pei, Dorothy Schiff, Neil Simon, Preston Robert Tisch, and Lila Bell Wallace.
In 1977, the City Club inaugurated the Richard S. Childs Lectureship in Municipal Administration. In 1982 San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros delivered a Childs Lecture on the topic "A Survival Strategy for America's Cities." Other Childs Lecture speakers over the years included Governor Mario Cuomo, I. D. Robbins, Richard Ravitch, and Robert F. Wagner Jr. The Childs Lecture series lasted until 1992.
In 1984 the City Club elected Sally Goodgold as its first female president; she was noted for her ability to attract high-profile names to the Club's weekly luncheon speaker series.
The club suspended activities in 2003 and officially dissolved in 2009.
In 2013 the club hired a new president, Michael S. Gruen, and resumed its role of civic advocacy, taking on New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's East Midtown rezoning plans.
Clubhouse
The Club's first headquarters, located at 677 Fifth Avenue, was secured in October 1892.By the early 1900s the City Club commissioned its own clubhouse at 55 West 44th Street, which was designed by architect Austin W. Lord and erected in 1904. After 40 years at that location, in 1944 the club moved to the Hotel Russell at 45 Park Avenue.
Membership
Socialite and philanthropist Peter Marié was an early member of the City Club, as were publisher Frank Howard Dodd and businessman Hamilton McKown Twombly. Architect and town planner Electus D. Litchfield was a City Club member.In 1892 the club's membership was more than 650 men, and by 1904, membership was 667.
By 1950 City Club membership was down to 200 men and the club had been unsuccessful at recruiting a new generation of civic-minded applicants. In February 1950 they voted to disband, stating that the work they had been doing should be "entrusted to the Citizens Union..., which has the staff to carry on...." Shortly thereafter, however, the club was revived with an influx of younger men, and it vowed to continue its work.
In 1969, club membership was about 200 men, but had increased to about 400 in 1973.
In 1974 the City Club of New York opened its membership to women.
In 2011 the City Club had 450 members.
Club officers
Notable City Club of New York officers, past and presentPresident
- 1892–1895 James C. Carter— Club's first president
- 1906–1909 George McAneny — left to become Manhattan Borough President
- 1930–1942 Richard S. Childs — the Richard S. Childs Lectureship in Municipal Administration, which lasted from 1977–1992, was named in his honor
- 1956–1958 Theodore R. Kupferman — later became a New York City Councilman and then a member of the U.S. House of Representatives
- 1961–1965 I. D. Robbins
- 1966–c. 1969 — Stanley Turkel
- 1984–1988 Sally Goodgold
- 2013–present Michael S. Gruen
Chairman
- 1911–1944 Joseph M. Price — key organizer of the Fusion Executive Committee, which in 1913 succeeded in electing John Purroy Mitchel mayor of New York, defeating the Tammany Hall candidate
- 1967–1969 I. D. Robbins
- 1979–1989 Stanley Turkel
- 1989-1994 Sally Goodgold
Albert S. Bard Award
The Bard Award was born into controversy when the City Club refused to present any awards in its inaugural year, claiming that they were unable to find "a single work of civic architecture created in the city since 1958 worthy" of the award. The New York chapter of the American Institute of Architects sharply criticized the City Club for this pronouncement.
For many years, the Bard Awards were distributed on alternate years for public and private buildings. Top awards were deemed "First Honor;" those that didn't reach such a high level were called "Merit Awards." Award juries were composed of a rotating group of top architects and urban planners, as well as City Club of New York officers.
The City Club stopped presenting the Albert S. Bard Award in the early 1990s; winners included:
- 1963: No winners selected
- 1964: Pepsi-Cola Corporation World Headquarters — designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
- 1965: Riis Houses — designed by M. Paul Friedberg & Partners
- 1966: Jacob Kaplan — for civic work; keynote speech by New York City Mayor John Lindsay
- 1967: Chatham Towers — designed by Kelly and Gruzen
- 1967: Lower Manhattan Plan — designed by Wallace McHarg Roberts & Todd
- 1967: University Village — designed by James Ingo Freed and I. M. Pei
- 1968: Ford Foundation Building — designed by Kevin Roche and engineer John Dinkeloo
- 1968: Paley Park — designed by Zion & Breen
- 1968: Whitney Museum of American Art — designed by Marcel Breuer
- 1970: 1 Police Plaza — designed by M. Paul Friedberg & Partners
- 1970: Concert halls, Juilliard School — designed by Pietro Belluschi
- 1970: MUSE, Bedford Lincoln Neighborhood Museum — designed by Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer
- 1971: Graduate Center Mall, City University of New York — designed by Carl J. Petrilli
- 1971: Technology Building II, New York University — designed by Marcel Breuer and Hamilton Smith
- 1972: National Airlines Terminal, John F. Kennedy International Airport — designed by I. M. Pei & Partners
- 1972: Residential Building, Henry Ittleson Center for Child Research — designed by Abraham W. Geller
- 1973: Bed-Stuy Community Pool — designed by Alan Lapidus
- 1973: Bronx State Hospital Rehabilitation Center — designed by Gruzen and Partners
- 1973: Twin Parks Northeast Housing — designed by Richard Meier & Partners
- 1975: Salanter Akiba Riverdale Academy — designed by Caudill Rowlett Scott
- 1975: Waterside Plaza — designed by Davis, Brody & Associates
- 1975: TKTS booth, Times Square — designed by Mayers & Schiff Associates
- 1976: 1199 Plaza — designed by Hodne/Stageberg Partners
- 1976: Arts for Living Center, Henry Street Settlement — designed by Prentice and Chan, Olhausen
- 1977: Bronx Development Center — designed by Richard Meier & Partners
- 1977: Roosevelt Island Complex — developed by New York State Urban Development Corporation
- 1977: Sherman Fairchild Center for the Life Sciences, Columbia University — designed by Romaldo Giurgola
- 1978: Citicorp Center — designed by architect Hugh Stubbins and structural engineer William LeMessurier
- 1978: Goodman House — designed by Ashok Bhavnani
- 1981: No winners selected
- 1982: No winners selected
- 1984: Battery Park City Esplanade — designed by Cooper, Robertson & Partners
- 1984: Fulton Street Pedestrian Mall — designed by Lee Harris Pomeroy
- 1984: Prospect Park Bridges — designed by Stephen Jacobs Group
- 1988: H.E.L.P. I — designed by Cooper, Robertson & Partners
- 1990: Central Park Zoo – designed by Kevin Roche
- 1992: Eugenio Maria de Hostos Community College Allied Health Complex — designed by Bartholomew Voorsanger with Hirsch Danois Architects
- 1992: H.E.L.P. Houses — designed by Cooper, Robertson & Partners
Distinguished New Yorker Award
- 1967: 17 recipients, including Roger N. Baldwin, Detlev Bronk, Cass Canfield, Kenneth Clark, Duke Ellington, Martha Graham, Alvin Saunders Johnson, Robert Moses, A. Philip Randolph, David Sarnoff, Whitney North Seymour, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, and Austin Tobin
- 1969: Jacob Potofsky, president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America
- 1970: Mary Lasker, head of the Lasker Foundation — first time individual award given to a woman
- 1972: Andrew Heiskell, chairman of Time Inc.
- 1976: Charles Bluhdorn, head of Gulf and Western Industries
Publications
- Mayor Low's Administration in New York. City Club of New York.
Newsletters
- City Club Bulletin
- City Club Comments — edited for years by President and board member I. D. Robbins and his wife Caroline Robbins
- The Gadfly — initially edited by Stanley Turkel