The present-day Oxford and Cambridge Club is the result of the 1972 merger of the
United University Club and of the
Oxford and Cambridge University Club. The United University Club was founded in 1821 for members of the Universities of
Oxford and
Cambridge. As a result of its lengthy waiting list, in 1830 the Oxford and Cambridge University Club was founded. After the
Second World War, both clubs, along with much of
Clubland, fell into financial difficulties. In 1967, in an attempt to improve its financial position, the Oxford and Cambridge University Club began to admit to its membership graduates of any university in the world, while the United University Club rejected the idea. In March 1972, the two clubs merged, and membership was restricted once again to members of Oxford and Cambridge. Initially the new club, known as the
United Oxford and Cambridge University Club, was based at the United University Club club house at 1 Suffolk Street. In 1973 the club was moved to the premises of the former United University Club on
Pall Mall, which it still occupies today. In 2001, it changed its name to the
Oxford and Cambridge Club. Originally, women were only admitted as associate members. The club's membership policy came under attack in the mid-1990s. In February 1995, a statement signed by the heads of more than 70 Oxford and Cambridge colleges, two
vice chancellors, and Oxford's chancellor, declared that the two universities were disassociating from the club "because of what they call[ed] its 'offensive' and 'discriminatory' policies to women". Dr
Peter North, the vice chancellor of Oxford, stated at the time that the "'university council has asked the law department to consider our legal position in relation to the use of the universities' names and our coats of arms'". Four months later, the club voted to allow lady associate members "access to the main staircase and the library", provided they pay an extra fee of £100. In February 1996, members of the club voted to admit women as full members. Queen
Margrethe II of Denmark became the club's first Honorary Lady Member in 1997. In June 2017 the club elected its first female chair. ==Membership==