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Royal Air Force Club

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4-497: The Royal Air Force Club , or RAF Club in short-form, is a club located at 128 Piccadilly , London . Membership is open to those who hold, or have held, commissions in the RAF , PMRAFNS , Reserve Forces and Commonwealth and friendly foreign air forces. The Chair of the Board of Trustees is The Hon. Air Vice-Marshal David Murray. The Royal Flying Corps Club, the forerunner of

8-788: The Club was fully opened to Members although it was not officially opened by the Duke of York until 24 February 1922. On 14 March 1922 the Club was visited by King George V and Queen Mary . This association with the Royal Family continues to this day, Queen Elizabeth II being the Club's Patron from 1952-2022. As of 2017, a year's membership subscription costs half of one day's wages for serving (from £42.50), or former serving (retired) RAF officers (£155.00). For non-RAF personnel, affiliate membership starts at £170 plus joining fee. Non-RAF personnel who are eligible to apply for membership include those in

12-765: The Royal Air Force Club, opened at 13 Bruton Street in 1917. It became the Royal Air Force Club in 1918 shortly after the first Lord Cowdray donated funds to obtain a permanent building which would house the Club. The buildings, still in use today, were acquired by the middle of 1919 (the Piccadilly frontage was originally the Ladies Lyceum Club, while the rear half, facing Old Park Lane, was stables). Between 1919 and 1921 extensive reconstruction took place supervised by architect Maurice Webb and largely financed by Lord Cowdray. On 2 January 1922

16-769: The aerospace industry who are Fellows of the Royal Aeronautical Society (FRAeS). 51°30′15″N 0°08′55″W  /  51.5041°N 0.1485°W  / 51.5041; -0.1485 List of gentlemen%27s clubs in London This is an incomplete list of private members' clubs with physical premises in London , United Kingdom, including those that no longer exist or have merged, with an additional section on those that appear in fiction. Historically most of these clubs were gentlemen's clubs with membership restricted to men. More recently,

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