Holbeck Working Men's Club honoured with blue plaque
- Published
A blue plaque marking the oldest continuously opened working men's club in the UK has been unveiled.
Holbeck Working Men's Club in south Leeds opened its current premises in 1878, although it had formed seven years earlier.
No other working men's club has been in continuous operation for so long, Leeds Civic Trust said.
The club had a new lease of life when it became home to the Slung Low theatre and community college.
Hugh Gaitskell, former leader of the Labour party and MP for Leeds South between 1945-63, would often frequent the club as did comedian Ernie Wise who was born in Leeds.
The club was formed to help to educate working men as well as holding social and community activities, the civic trust said.
Bars were introduced as a way of making money to plough back into its educational activities, it added.
Built at a cost of £1,172 the club had rooms for refreshment, billiards and a lecture hall for 300 people and opened on Easter Monday 1878.
Martin Hamilton, director of the trust said "People often complain that blue plaques are given to worthies at the top of their profession but the workers who put in the hours to give them that status are often forgotten.
"This plaque is an opportunity to correct that."
Clubs like the Holbeck were once at the heart of many communities across the UK but changing social habits, demographics and even the smoking ban are all said to have reduced the number of working men's clubs.
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- Published25 February 2019
- Published5 February 2014