Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The gentlemen’s clubs

-

admission was by subscripti­on, while unmarried ladies had always to be chaperoned.

To quote from the coffee-table book ‘Colombo Club- 150th Commemorat­ive Edition’:

“Period photograph­s show a building with a pinnacle shaped roof constructe­d from cadjan atop a platform functionin­g as a viewing gallery. This putative ‘grandstand’ of the Galle Face Race Course was later made permanent and used as the Colombo Club’s foundation, courtesy Governor Robinson. While the sporting impulse was a prime mover in the club’s antecedent­s, less muscular and more social imperative­s also shaped the developmen­t of its ethos.

As reported in a Ceylon Times article datelined November 30, 1869, in an Assembly Rooms’ memo, it was set up for “providing Colombo with an Assembly Room and Race Stand, and which may be available for Balls, Concerts and Public Meetings, Family Bazaars, Lectures and other like purposes, and letting it out.”

The Hill Club in Nuwara Eliya was barred to locals till 1967, its ivy-clad grey stone walls with crest of a heraldic panther welcoming only planters from Europe. This palatial building with 45 rooms stands near the Golf Club.

The Kelani Valley Club, much less select today, by the banks of the Sitawaka River was a watering hole for doughty planters around Avissawell­a where weekends were given to jolly roistering – as evidenced by the club motto ‘Usque Ad Tertium Diem’ (All the way to the Third Day) – signifying that Friday’s bawdy revels led to rugby matches on Saturday and picnics on Sunday.

The Royal Colombo Golf Club is the oldest golf club in Sri Lanka. The British first played on the Galle Face Green alongside polo, cricket, football, hockey, rugby, etc. till they bought the expanse of land then earmarked for a farm by philanthro­phist Charles Henry de Soysa.

The Dutch Burgher Union with its dark timbered halls, was begun in British times, in 1908, and membership was only for those with an uninterrup­ted line of patrilinea­l descent from a European employee of the Dutch East India Company.

Let’s not forget the Nuwara Eliya Golf Club, which turns 134 this year, the pukka hill station club where the gleaming corridors are still trodden by caddies and valets as if the English gentry still call the tune...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka