
26 minute read
Obituaries
Charles Mugane Njonjo EGH
In January 2022 at the grand old age of 101 years and eleven months, Muthaiga Country Club and Kenya lost an individual who had lived a most remarkable life, and lived it to the full.
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Up until very recently (and when he was well into his nineties) Charles would often be seen driving himself to the Club, usually for a good lunch with his many, many friends, and of course resplendent, at all times, in his signature chalk-striped suit. Noone ever had quite the panache or the sartorial eloquence, or indeed elegance, of Charles. Charles’ father was a colonial era Senior Chief.
He was sent to school at Alliance High School and from there he went to King’s College Budo in Uganda where he met and developed a very close friendship with the then Kabaka of Buganda. He went on to study at Adams College, Durban and Fort Hare University, Grahamstown. Arriving in England in the early 1950s came as an unexpected shock. It was more unwelcoming and racist than South Africa. Still struggling with post War poverty, life for black students was not easy. Stories of racist landladies and painful discrimination were part of the challenges Charles faced on his way to University College Exeter to study Public Administration, despite his desire to study Law. From Exeter he moved to London and began a protracted struggle with the Colonial Office and the Council for Legal Education, who were reluctant to provide further funding for him to study Law. Undaunted, he found enough money to pay his rent or, as he used to say, ‘enjoy a good meal’ with his friend Seretse Khama who was to become the Founding President of Botswana. His friendship with Seretse was one of the great joys of his student years, culminating in Charles being Seretse’s Best Man at his marriage to Ruth Williams. (One of his many godsons who attended his 100th birthday celebration was the former President of Botswana, Lieutenant General Dr. Seretse Khama Ian Khama, son of Seretse and Ruth, who were the subject of the film ‘A United Kingdom,’ about the controversy, on all sides, surrounding their interracial marriage. Charles, as their Best Man, was portrayed in the film by Ugandan actor, Arnold Oceng.) Charles was called to the Bar at Gray’s Inn in 1952 and was a pupil in the Chambers of Lord Elwyn Jones, who was a Nuremberg War Trials prosecutor and a Labour Party MP. Charles returned to Kenya in 1955. Once more he was faced with obstruction and racial prejudice. There was no ‘appropriate’ vacancy for a ‘Native’ Barrister. He was eventually posted to Mombasa in 1957 as Assistant Registrar General and Deputy Official Receiver.
In 1963 he became the Republic of Kenya’s first Attorney-General and, until his death, was the last surviving member of the first post-Independence Cabinet.
Post-Independence Charles was not a supporter of the East African community and at that time was known to have many public spats with the late Julius Nyerere, founding President of Tanzania, famously responding to Nyerere’s vituperative comment that Kenya’s brand of capitalism was nothing more than ‘dog eat dog’ with a wry observation that at least it was ‘better than a man eat nothing society’. Charles continued in the office of A-G until 1979 at which time he was elected as the MP of the Kikuyu Constituency. He returned to the Cabinet of President Moi as Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs.
In 1983 he resigned from Government in the wake of allegations that he was involved in the abortive attempted coup of August 1982. He faced a lengthy Presidential Commission of Enquiry chaired by the then Chief Justice, Cecil MiIler; He received a Presidential pardon and, although he forged a new and enduring friendship with the late President Moi, he decided to remove himself from political life from that time.
Charles was a great philanthropist and was a long serving trustee of the Thomas Barnado’s Children Home. In 1998 President Moi invited Charles to chair the Bomb Disaster Fund set up in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks that year in Nairobi. He was also Chairman of the East Africa Wildlife Society and was proud of being part of the preservation of Kenya’s water towers as a trustee of the Rhino Ark Charitable Trust. He also
chaired the Board of Trustees of the Kenya Wildlife Service and celebrated his 100th birthday in 2020 by visiting the Great Lakes region to view the gorillas. Charles had a deep love of the arts and culture generally and had a particular soft spot for the Nairobi Chamber Choir, led by the irrepressible Ken Wakia. Charles accompanied the Choir to Windsor, west of London, where they performed before Queen Elizabeth II at her Diamond Jubilee celebrations, after which Charles and Margaret were invited to stay at Buckingham Palace as guests of the Queen and Prince Philip. Family was everything to Charles, he married Margaret Bryson in 1972 and they were blessed with three children, Wairimu – ‘Nimu’ – Mary Wambui and Josiah David and grandchildren abound. Charles was a warm, magnanimous, congenial man, with a wonderful sense of humour. He was deeply compassionate, loving and generous in the extreme. He had time for everyone - prince and pauper, regardless of colour or creed. He embodied the soul of Muthaiga Country Club and we shall miss him very much indeed.
Charles was a Member of the Club for 52 years. Rest in Peace Charles Mugane Njonjo EGH.
January 1920 - January 2022
Donna Hurt
Donna was born and raised in Bowie Texas, only child of Don and Odell Lawrence. After High School she moved to Fort Worth to get a secretarial job. She worked at music venues and ran the pool table sections where bands and talent, such as Jim Morrison, used to play.
In the late 1970s Donna launched her acting career; she played a role in the musical Hair and landed a small part in the daytime soap General Hospital. It was during this time she met the love of her life, the actor John Hurt. Donna’s marriage to John was the happiest time of her life.
They settled in London, and Donna would regale her friends with stories of her parties with Queen, Eric Clapton and other stars of show business. When John proposed to Donna, they headed to Freddie Mercury’s home to celebrate, but he was, apparently, not best pleased at them stealing his limelight with their engagement news.
John and Donna married in 1984, after which Donna accompanied John on all his film shoots. They fell in love with East Africa when John was filming White Mischief on location. They bought a piece of land at the foot of Mount Kenya, and built a beautiful five-bedroom house together, named Wingu Kenda.
Sadly, the marriage did not last, but Donna cherished the memories of her wild and wonderful life with John.
Donna remained in Nanyuki moving to Mukima Ridge in her later life. She was a wild card. She was the life and soul of any gathering and she loved to tell her story. She was a stalwart member of the North Kenya Polo Club, a very talented cook, and was passionate about animals.
She loved to host parties, was the loudest in the room and was a force to reckon with. She channelled her boundless love of life into numerous projects, her most recent was volunteering at the Palliative Care Thrift Shop in Nanyuki. She told everyone how much she enjoyed giving her time to something so worthwhile.
Donna wasn’t frightened of anything and would fight for what she believed was right. She was a safe haven for those she loved dearly, and she cherished the company of those closest to her.
Donna was a Member of Muthaiga Club for 21 years. Although she had no immediate family in Kenya, she had her Kenya ‘family’, who will all miss her deeply.
At an appropriate time, a memorial service will be held for Donna in her beloved garden on Mukima Ridge.

July 1948 - May 2022
Nigel Ralph Pavitt
Nigel Pavitt was a bold and constant traveler who was to be found in the far-flung reaches of the globe or the African bush more often than at home. Not long after his 80th birthday, he was hauled up the sheer face of an Ethiopian amba on a rope to photograph the 10th Century church, Debre Damo. On that and subsequent trips he documented 66 churches and monasteries for ‘Ethiopia: The Living Churches of an Ancient Kingdom.’ This weighty tome of more than 800 photos was the capstone of a postretirement photographic career that produced a vast library of images and another five coffee-table books documenting Kenya’s early explorers and settlers and the pastoralists of the Rift Valley.
Nigel was born and raised in Wimbledon and Surrey. He was entirely self-taught in photography, a passion kindled at Sherborne School in Dorset where he experimented with pinhole cameras. Yearning for adventure after graduation, he enlisted with the British Army, joined the 5th Battalion of the KAR and went to Kenya in 1955 at the age of 18. In 1956 he signed up with the KAR as a regular army officer.
He was put in charge of a fort on the northwest shore of Lake Turkana for six months and then made Adjutant at Lanet and then Nanyuki. After independence in 1963 he joined 5KR (Kenya Rifles). When he was 28, he was appointed an MBE for his tours of duty in northeast Kenya during the Shifta Emergency. He was an excellent leader who showed such concern for his men that the Nandi and Turkana both made him an honorary elder.
Nigel’s links to the military through friendship and philanthropy remained strong. He was a trustee of the Kenyan branch of the British Legion, a charity that looks after those who served in the King’s African Rifles. Nigel was at the forefront of revitalising the Askari Appeal that has improved the lives of hundreds of old soldiers and their widows.
On leaving the army in 1967 he became a Kenyan citizen and joined Kenya Wine Agencies Ltd. He retired at 55 and went into partnership in an ostrich farm and growing roses for export. He sat on the board of Gertrude’s Garden Children’s Hospital and was Chair of the Mara Conservancy. In 1993 he was awarded the Order of the Grand Warrior of Kenya for his services rendered to the country.
Nigel was a Member of MCC for 51 years.
July 1936 - April 2022

Eamon Mullan
Eamon Mullan was born to Irish parents and raised in England. His first calling was as a footballer, playing for Blackpool Football Club in the Premier League. However, he was suspended for three months after breaking the boarding house curfew rules! The football industry’s loss was the culinary world’s gain. In 1967, he started an apprenticeship at the Welcombe Hotel in Stratford Upon Avon. He entered his first cooking competition at the age of 17, where he won two gold medals and one silver. At the age of 18, he met his wife Lesley with whom he was married for 47 years. At the young age of 19, he won the Midlands Junior Chef Competition and entered the Chef of the Year Competition at Hotelympia in London, where he came third. Eamon worked in many establishments around the world, from the Negresco Hotel in France, Gleneagles Hotel in Scotland, FrankfurterHof in Germany, the Round Hill Hotel in Jamaica, the Bangkok Oriental, Raffles in Singapore and the Ritz in London, to name a few. When he and Lesley settled in Nairobi in 1975, it was the start of a new era for the Kenyan hospitality industry, when Eamon singlehandedly put Kenya on the culinary map. Eamon started as Sous Chef at the New Stanley Hotel Grill Room before setting up the famous Bacchus Club and taking on the Executive Chef role at the Norfolk Hotel. During these years Eamon was Group Executive Chef in charge of numerous lodges and hotels including the Sindbad Hotel in Malindi, Nyali Beach in Mombasa, Keekorok Lodge in the Masaii Mara, Treetops Lodge in Nyeri, Samburu Lodge and the Coral Strand Hotel in the Seychelles. His final position was as Consultant Culinaire at the Fairview Hotel.
January 1951 - February 2022
December 1959 - March 2022
During the 1980s, Eamon’s restaurant, the Ibis Grill, at the Norfolk Hotel was voted third out of the top ten restaurants worldwide by the readers of Condé Naste magazine. Eamon cooked for many famous people in his time, but he was particularly proud when he was invited to cook for HM Queen Elizabeth II, during her visit to Kenya in 1983. In his 55 years in the culinary industry Eamon transformed taste buds, changed lives and was a breath of fresh air to all the kitchens he worked in. Eamon loved cooking but his passion was training and mentoring youngsters, especially young Kenyans, sharing his knowledge and giving them a chance in life. The ‘Mullan’s Boys’, as they like to call themselves, are working around the globe. Muthaiga Club’s Executive Chef Joseph Macharia and Pastry Chef Vincent Ombete, were both trained by him.

Eamon is survived by his wife Lesley, daughters Georgia and Ciera, and his grand-daughter Amélie. He was a Member of Muthaiga for 40 years and will be truly missed by his many friends and fellow Members but also in the MCC kitchens where he was a frequent visitor as guest Chef or consultant.
Christopher Brian Hasluck Shaw
Christopher was the oldest of three children to Mike and Diana Shaw of Meiga Estate. Chris went to Kenton College in Nairobi and then Bradfield College in UK where he excelled in both sports and academia. When he finished school he enroled at Exeter University, to read engineering. He always remembered Exeter as one of the best periods of his life. It was the place where his engineering mind was ignited. Chris then went on to Sandhurst, where he passed out as a Lieutenant. He joined the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment, where he slotted in immediately, with many remembering him for his huge smile and infectious laugh. Chris was part of the Cyclops Squadron, and was recognised as a competent officer who had a relaxed social grace with anyone of any rank. Deciding army life was not for him in the long term, Chris went on to join Barclays Bank in London, and it was during this time he met his wife Janie. They were married in 1987 at Great Windsor Chapel. Chris and Janie moved back to Nairobi in 1991, where Chris took up a job at KPMG, but he was never a ‘one job man’ and in the years that followed, he was a tea farmer, well known flower farm consultant, property developer and eccentric landlord. He even tried his hand at Somali pirate hostage negotiation and rescue. Chris had two great passions in life - tennis and sailing. He was a fiercely competitive sailor, and participated in numerous national and one Fireball World Championship. As for tennis, he wouldn’t miss a week at Limuru, Karen or Muthaiga Tennis Clubs if he could help it. In his later years, Chris became a huge advocate for protecting the environment and looked after his mother Diana’s forest on the farm with unwavering passion. Just like his beloved terriers, when he sunk his teeth into a challenge, he wouldn’t let go. He was a community man and was always ready to help anyone at any time no matter the circumstance. He built a thriving and wonderful community up at Togi Farm, full of tenants who brought a lot of joy and laughter to his life. Chris will be fondly remembered by all who knew him for his enthusiasm, his lust for life, his mettle, his fun and his loyal friendship. He is survived by his four children Amy, Rachel, Antonia and Jonathan and siblings Nigel and Tessa (McLellan). He was a Member of MCC for 41 years

Hugh Anthony Valentine
‘Tony’ Valentine was the second of three sons to Cecil and Sheena Valentine, who lived in Muthaiga, almost opposite Muthaiga Country Club.
He and his older brother Peter (his younger brother Ian was born in 1942) used to ride their bicycles around the MCC playing fields that eventually turned into the golf course. In the years leading up to WWII Tony’s father spent much of his time with the Kenya African Rifles, setting up the initial Kenya Regiment, so was regularly away from home. He had just formed his fledgling Commodity Brokerage Company and Tony’s mother and Colin Davis had to run the Coffee and Tea side of the Brokerage Company, as best as they could, throughout the war years.
Tony started school at St Christopher’s, which was located in Nanyuki but then moved during the war to the Kinangkop. These were challenging years and there was a time during 1941 school holidays when Cecil was at war and Sheena was in South Africa for medical reasons. The two boys cycled every day to the train station in Nairobi (some distance on a bike through the forested tracks and valleys) to see if either of their parents had arrived on the train from Mombasa.
In 1942, Tony was awarded a Certificate of Gallantry for saving another pupil from drowning in the Kariti River - that was Shirley Douglas Dufresne (née Allen).
By 1945 Tony was sent to St Mary’s Secondary School for a couple of years and then Lancing College in UK in 1947. The mode of transport then was a three-week voyage by ship, through Suez and the Mediterranean. He spent much of the ensuing school and college holidays in England but once flew out in a flying boat via the Nile to Naivasha. At school Tony excelled in athletics and rugby and was made Head of his Junior School and Head of House. In 1948, Cecil and Sheena moved to Limuru where Tony lived until late 2021.
In 1952 Tony returned to Kenya to join the Kenya Regiment and was eventually posted as a District Officer KG, in the Fort Hall area. Around this time, Cecil was relieved as Commanding Officer of the Regiment and began to expand his Brokerage Business into Tanzania and Uganda, brokering tea, coffee and sisal auctions in Mombasa, Nairobi, Kampala and Moshi. In 1956, Tony joined the family business and began to take part in all aspects of the East African operation, particularly the coffee auctions, which he continued to manage until Kenya Coffee Auctions was dissolved in 2004. This constituted nearly 50 years of exemplary service to the Kenya Coffee Industry.
In 1956 Tony met his wife Sue, who was then working at the military HQ as Personal Assistant to the Chief of Staff, and they were married in June 1958 in Limuru Church.
Throughout his active life he was a keen sportsman, playing rugby for Ruiru Club in the 1950s and Squash at Limuru and Muthaiga. He held a single figure handicap in golf.
The coast held a special place in his heart and he spent many holidays with his brothers at Malindi, and later on with family at Watamu, where he owned a beach house.
He was also very keen on safaris and I recall many an extended camping trip around Kenya and Tanzania with equally intrepid family friends. He loved his game bird ‘for-the-pot’ shooting safaris into the dry country and he especially enjoyed the many bush walks that went with them.
The Club was very dear to Tony's heart and, like his father before him, he served it with great distinction and dedication. He was elected to become a Member of the Club in 1954 at the age of 20. He joined the Main Committee in 1969, serving as Vice Chairman of Committees from 1974 to 1979, Chairman of Committees from 1979 to 1989, Vice Chairman of the Club from 1989 to 1997 and Chairman of the Club from 1997 to 2003. He also served on the House & Finance Committee for seventeen years.
Tony was an even-handed, hard-working Committee member, a hugely respected and a much-liked Chairman and a consummate gentleman at all times.
Tony is survived by his son Philip and family, and his late daughter Penny's family. His wife Sue passed away in 2017.
Tony was a Member of MCC for just under 68 years.

April 1934 - March 2022
Philip Valentine
DEATHS
The Club regrets to announce the deaths of the following Members
JOSÉ FREITAS CARVALHO on 5 February 2022 JEAN WATSON on 3 May 2022 DONNA HURT on 11 May 2022 PEGETHA PEARSON on 30 May 2022 JOHN HENRY ARTHUR on 2 June 2022 KEVIN TUCKER on 8 June 2022
If anyone would like to publish an obituary for a Member who has died recently, please send a tribute and photograph of the deceased to the secretariat@mcc.co.ke
CANDIDATES BEING CONSIDERED FOR MEMBERSHIP 1ST MAY TO 30TH JUNE 2022
Proposer Candidate Category
Jane Chemng’orem Jebet Chemng’orem Full Town
Alnashir Visram Alissa Visram Full Town
Louise Roy Lennart Hientz Short Term - Adjoa Agblo-Hientz Short Term - Yaelle Hientz Under 7
Karen Gikunda Geoffrey Luseno Full Town - Jennifer Luseno Full Town - Jerome Luseno Junior Full Town
Karen Gikunda Cecil Luseno Full (18-29) Resident
Mohit Sahni Shiv Shah Full Town - Kunali Shah Full Town
Michael Ouya Kamau Maruvu Full (18-29) Resident
Farid Mohamed Aleem Karmali Full Town - Nabila Khanbhai Full Town
Sejal Patel Niels Rosenkrantz Full Town - Jhaleh Rosenkrantz Full Town
SWEEPSTAKES MAY 2022
Prize Member Name
1st Peter James K. Mwangi
2nd Anthony Gathigi
3rd Charles Harris Bryant
4th Ian Mark Barrah
5th Douglas G. Morey
6th Robert Dewar
7th Helen Sarah Kampf
8th Valter V. Donati
9th Rose Wanjiru Kinuthia
SWEEPSTAKES JUNE 2022
Prize Member Name
1st Njoroge Ngigi
2nd Jane Waitherero Mwai
3rd Nicholas Michaelides
4th Eugene Muriu Ngumi
5th Douglas G. Morey
6th Dinesh Kapila
7th Robert N. Ngugi
8th Kristopher Kinyanjui
9th Anne Da Gama-Rose Amount
62,617/-
31,308/-
17,890/-
17,890/-
13,417/-
8,945/-
8,945/-
8,945/-
8,945/-
Amount
62,700/-
31,350/-
17,914/-
17,914/-
13,345/-
8,957/-
8,957/-
8,957/-
8,957/-
CANDIDATES BEING CONSIDERED FOR MEMBERSHIP 1ST JUNE TO 31ST JULY 2022
Proposer Candidate Category
Cyrus Njiru Mark Maessick Short Term - Elizabeth Maessick Short Term - Angelica Maessick Junior Family Short Term - Juliana Maessick Junior Family Short Term
Mala Gidoomal Henna Shah Full (18-29) Resident
Mala Gidoomal Sonia Shah Full (18-29) Resident
William R. Pearson Nikita Chandaria Full (18-29) Resident
Chandan J. Gidoomal Shaheen Lilani Full Town - Shellina Lilani Full Town
Derek Waruhiu Waweru Mathenge Full Town - Wendy Waweru Full Town
Derek Waruhiu Mathenge Waweru Full (18-29) Resident Derek Waruhiu Kanyua Waweru Full (18-29) Resident
Derek Waruhiu Wangui Waweru Full (18-29) Resident James G. Mathenge Wanja Mwangi Full (18-29) Resident
Pauline Vauhgan James Kahuha Full Town - Dorcas Kariuki Full Town
Answers to Bird Quiz
on Page 19
Red-faced Crombec - 1 Yellow Wagtail - 2 Green Pigeon - 3 Brown Snake Eagle - 4 Greater Blue-eared Starling - 5 Pink-backed Pelican - 6 Black Cuckoo-Shrike (f) - 7
The colours are those of Snooker balls with Red worth 1 point, Yellow 2, Green 3, Brown 4, Blue 5, Pink 6, and Black 7.
The White cue ball was not represented, so any bird with White in its name can be placed in the blank space.
All unsuccessful Quiz players are invited to seek their revenge on the Quiz Master in the Club Snooker Room!
MCC reciprocates with 114 Clubs in 24 countries around the world. The Reciprocity Committee invests a great deal of time ensuring that these Clubs are worthy of our association and Members are encouraged to submit brief reports if they visit or stay at any one of them. These reports will be published for the benefit and interest of other Members who may be planning to travel overseas. For more information and contact details of reciprocating Clubs please contact the Secretary’s office. AUSTRALIA Adelaide Club Adelaide Athenaeum Club Melbourne Australian Club Melbourne Melbourne Commonwealth Club Canberra Melbourne Club Melbourne Melbourne Savage Club Melbourne Naval Military and Airforce of South Australia Adelaide Royal Automobile Club of Australia Sydney Royal Automobile Club of Victoria Melbourne Tattersall’s Club Brisbane Tasmanian Club Hobart Union, University & Schools Club Sydney United Service Club Brisbane Weld Club Perth Western Australian Club Perth AUSTRIA St. Johanns Club Vienna BOLIVIA Circulo de La Union La Paz BELGIUM International Club Chateau Sainte-Anne Brussels CANADA Cypress Club Medicine Hat Granite Club Toronto The Hamilton Club Hamilton The National Club Toronto The Ranchmen’s Club Calgary Terminal City Club Vancouver Union Club of British Columbia Victoria University Club of Montreal Montreal University Club of Toronto Toronto Vancouver Club Vancouver CHILE Club De La Union Santiago FRANCE Cercle de l’Union Interalliee Paris The Travellers Club Paris GERMANY Anglo-German Club E.V Hamburg Union International Club Frankfurt HONG KONG The Hong Kong Club Hong Kong INDIA Tollygunge Club Ltd Kolkata Umed Club Jodhpur Ootacamund Club Udhagamandalam, Tamil Nadu INDIA continued Secunderabad Club Secunderabad Bangalore Club Bangalore IRELAND Kildare Street and University Club Dublin The Stephen’s Green Hibernian Club Dublin JAPAN Tokyo American Club Tokyo LUXEMBOURG Cercle Munster Luxembourg MALAWI Mulika Blantyre NETHERLANDS The Nieuwe of Littéraire Sociëteit De WitteThe Hague NEW ZEALAND Christchurch Club Christchurch The Canterbury Club Inc. Christchurch Hawke’s Bay Club Napier The Northern Club Auckland The Wellington Club Wellington SINGAPORE Tanglin Club Singapore SOUTH AFRICA Cape Town Club Cape Town The Country Club Johannesburg Johannesburg Durban Club Durban Inanda Club Johannesburg Kelvin Grove Club Cape Town Port Elizabeth St. Georges Club Port Elizabeth The Pretoria Country Club Pretoria Rand Club Johannesburg SPAIN Circulo Ecuestre Barcelona Real Gran Peña Madrid SRI LANKA The Hill Club Nuwara Eliya THAILAND The British Club, Bangkok Bangkok
MCC reciprocates with 114 Clubs in 24 countries around the world. The Reciprocity Committee invests a great deal of time ensuring that these Clubs are worthy of our association and Members are encouraged to submit brief reports if they visit or stay at any one of them. These reports will be published for the benefit and interest of other Members who may be planning to travel overseas. For more information and contact details of reciprocating Clubs please contact the Secretary’s office. AUSTRALIA City Adelaide Club Adelaide Athenaeum Club Melbourne Australian Club Melbourne Melbourne Commonwealth Club Canberra Melbourne Club Melbourne Queensland Club Brisbane Royal Automobile Club of Australia Sydney UK Royal Automobile Club of Victoria Melbourne Tattersall’s Club Brisbane Army & Navy Club London Tasmanian Club Hobart Boodle’s London Union, University & Schools Buck’s London Club of Sydney Sydney Cardiff & County Club Cardiff Weld Club Perth Carlton Club London City of London Club London AUSTRIA Farmer’s Club London St. Johanns Club Vienna Hurlingham Club London Ipswich & Suffolk Club Ipswich BOLIVIA Lansdowne Club London Leander Henley-on-Thames, Circulo de La Union La Paz Naval Club London BELGIUM Northern Counties Club Newcastle Nottingham & Notts United Services Nottingham International Club Chateau Sainte-Anne Brussels The Oriental London Oxford & Cambridge Club London CANADA Phyllis Court Club Henley-on-Thames, Forest & Stream Club Quebec The Reform Club London Granite Club Toronto Royal Air Force Club London Mount Royal Club Montreal Royal Automobile Club London Rideau Club Ottawa Royal Over-Seas League London Royal Canadian Military Institute Toronto Savile Club London Saint James’s Club of Montreal Montreal The Athenaeum Liverpool The Hamilton Club Hamilton The Caledonian Club London The National Club Toronto The Cavalry & Guards London The Ranchmen’s Club Calgary The Clifton Club Bristol Union Club of British Columbia Victoria The East India Club London University Club of Toronto Toronto The New Club Cheltenham Vancouver Club Vancouver The New Club Edinburgh The Norfolk Club Norwich CARIBBEAN The Royal Northern & University Club Aberdeen West Indies Yacht Club Caribbean The Royal Scots Club Edinburgh The Sloane Club London CHILE The St James Club Manchester Club De La Union Santiago The Travellers Club London The Western Club Glasgow FRANCE The Turf Club London Cercle de l’Union Interalliee Paris Ulster Reform Club Belfast The Travellers Club Paris Vincent’s Club Oxford USA GERMANY The Army & Navy Club Washington DC Anglo-German Club E.V Hamburg Colony Club New York Union International Club Frankfurt Cosmos Club Washington DC HONG KONG The Princeton Club New York The Saturn Club Buffalo City, NY State The Hong Kong Club Hong Kong The Standard Club Chicago Union Club of Boston Boston INDIA The University Club Tollygunge Club Ltd Kolkata of Washington Washington DC Umed Club Jodhpur The Yale Club of New York City New York Ootacamund Club Ooty,Tamil Nadu ZIMBABWE Secunderabad Club Secunderabad Bangalore Club Bangalore Bulawayo Bulawayo Harare Club Harare
IRELAND Kildare Street and University Club Dublin The Stephen’s Green Hibernian Club Dublin ITALY Circolo Antico Tiro a Volo Rome JAPAN Tokyo American Club Tokyo LUXEMBOURG Cercle Munster Luxembourg NETHERLANDS The Nieuwe of Littéraire Sociëteit De Witte The Hague Royal Industrieele Groote Club Amsterdam NEW ZEALAND Christchurch Club Christchurch The Canterbury Club Inc. Christchurch Hawke’s Bay Club Napier The Northern Club Auckland The Wellington Club Wellington PAKISTAN Sind Club Karachi PORTUGAL Grémio Literário Club Lisbon SINGAPORE Tanglin Club Singapore SOUTH AFRICA The Country Club Johannesburg Johannesburg Durban Club Durban Inanda Club Johannesburg Kelvin Grove Club Cape Town Port Elizabeth St. George’s Club Port Elizabeth The Pretoria Country Club Pretoria Rand Club Johannesburg SPAIN Circulo Ecuestre Barcelona Real Club de Polo de Barcelona Barcelona Real Gran Peña Madrid SRI LANKA The Hill Club Nuwara Eliya SWEDEN Club Sällskapet Stockholm THAILAND The British Club, Bangkok Bangkok UK Army & Navy Club London Buck’s Club London Cardiff & County Club Cardiff Carlton Club London Farmer’s Club London Garrick Club London Hurlingham Club London Lansdowne Club London Leander Club Henley-on-Thames, Northern Counties Club Newcastle Oriental Club London Oxford & Cambridge Club London Phyllis Court Club Henley-on-Thames, Reform Club London Royal Air Force Club London Royal Automobile Club London Royal Over-Seas League London Savile Club London The Athenaeum Liverpool The Boodle’s London The Caledonian Club London The Cavalry & Guards Club London The Clifton Club Bristol The East India Club London The In & Out Naval & Military Club London The New Club Cheltenham The New Club Edinburgh The Norfolk Club Norwich The Royal Northern & University Club Aberdeen The Royal Scots Club Edinburgh The Sloane Club London The St. James Club Manchester The Western Club Glasgow Travellers Club London Turf Club London Ulster Reform Club Belfast USA The Army & Navy Club Washington DC Cosmos Club Washington DC Harvard Club of New York City New York The Explorers Club New York The Princeton Club New York The Saturn Club Buffalo City, NY State The Standard Club Chicago Toledo Club Toledo, Ohio Union Club of Boston Boston Union League of Philadelphia Philadelphia University Club of Cincinnati Cincinnati The University Club Washington DC The Yale Club of New York City New York ZIMBABWE Bulawayo Bulawayo Harare Club Harare
MUTHAIGA COUNTRY CLUB