Colonial Club was founded in 1891, fifth of the eating clubs. It drew its name --
mistakenly,it would seem -- from its first clubhouse, an old ship captain's house on Nassau Street, thought
to date to the Colonial period. In fact, it dates to the Federal period and
still stands in the same location near the intersection of Nassau and Queenston
Place: a narrow stone building, well back from the street, with three
distinctive porches stacked atop each other.
Perhaps one of Colonial
Club's early attractions was its location near the Evelyn College for women,
but after a couple of years the club decided to move.
Colonial relocated in 1893 to a pleasant Victorian house
at 178 Nassau Street, opposite the recently built Aaron Burr Hall. This
arrangement lasted for more than four years, until Ivy Club moved from its
clubhouse on the north side of Prospect Avenue
to its new and more
commodious lodgings across the street. Colonial acquired the old Ivy building
and in the spring of 1897 began extensive remodeling work.
A former member of the club, Frank Stewart '86, served as the architect. He
completely transformed the building by superimposing a "Colonial" facade,
complete with columns and a central pediment.
This entrance is
framed by a pair of Palladian windows. Of all the exterior details in the old
Ivy House, only the dormer over the east porch survived.
In the summer of 1906, lightning hit the building and burned a hole in the roof. Rather than repair the old structure, Colonial chose to erect a new clubhouse. This was the period when competition between clubs was at its most intense, and Colonial attempted to rise to the architectural challenge of its neighbors across the street -- Cottage and Ivy.
Stewart returned to design the new clubhouse, and his rendering
includes a number of subtle elements and details that were altered in
proportion in the actual building. In particular, the entrance portico was
smaller in the rendering and thus in much better scale. The large Palladian
window on the west end was replaced by two smaller windows in the building as
erected. And two of the first-
floor
windows feature polygonal bays, providing relief for the flat brick facade.
Despite its aspirations to compete with Ivy and Cottage, Colonial Club
does not quite match either in quality. For one, the monumental entrance
portico and columns are out of scale with the rest of building and project too
far forward. And Colonial was considerably smaller than its rivals. Although it
was 105 feet long --
not so coincidentally, the exact length of Cottage --
the two rear wings measure only 45 feet (Cottage's are more than twice that)
while the center section is 30 feet deep.