1950s Dress Regulations, United Service Club Queensland

"The brute covers himself, the rich man and the fop adorn themselves, the elegant man dresses!"

-Honore de Balzac

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pvpatty
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Joined: Mon Feb 11, 2008 1:53 pm
Location: Brisbane, QLD, Australia
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Fri May 23, 2008 2:56 am

I was reading through the published history of the United Service Club this morning and came across the following passage on dress regulations in the mid-1950s that I thought may interest some of you:
Many members who had played cricket, for example, in the afternoon like to return to the Club for a drink. Tuckfield wanted the dress regulations relaxed to allow for cricketers to drink in the Club without first going home to shower and change. The house facilities sub-committee spent much time considering Tuckfield’s eminently sensible suggestion. Its answers were formulated in terms of negative rules; standards of dress that were prohibited. These standards would have ruled out cricketers returning for a drink in their creams. Better, Tuckfield thought, that the Club lay down minimum standards. This was done and remain largely unchanged to the present: Shirt with collar and tie and sleeves rolled down or short sleeves; long trousers with belt, but no braces; a tie or cravat must be worn at all times, other than with a safari jacket. For Tuckfield’s colleagues, sports attire was permitted all day on Saturdays and Wednesday afternoon during the year, provided a tie or cravat was worn where a member did not wear a coat; where no tie or cravat was worn, a blazer, sports coat or other coat must be worn; long socks must be worn with shorts and at no time might a member enter the dining room without a tie or cravat.
Further information about the Club can be had at: http://www.unitedserviceclub.com.au/
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