The National Club was founded by Ontario
Letters Patent on July 6, 1874. There were 24 members in the original roster. The National Club was created to provide a home and Toronto focus for
Canada First, a nationalist movement founded in 1868 by
George Denison, Henry Morgan,
Charles Mair, William Foster and Robert Grant Haliburton. Canada First sought to “promote a sense of national purpose and to lay the intellectual foundations for Canadian nationality.” On March 30, 1875, the National Club moved into rented premises on the west side of Bay Street, immediately south of the building that housed the original
Toronto Stock Exchange. The Club's first president was Dr.
Goldwin Smith, a prominent historian and journalist, and a supporter of the Canada First movement. His First Vice President was
William Pearce Howland, the second Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. Other founders included the Hon.
Edward Blake, Ontario's first premier, and
Sir Oliver Mowat, Ontario's second premier. By the 1880s, the Canada First movement virtually disappeared, and the National Club had established itself as a general business and social club for Toronto's business and political leaders of all affiliations. In 1903, $50,000 of a total estimated construction cost of $90,000 was raised by subscription among National Club members to purchase a lot and build a new clubhouse at 303 Bay Street. On September 12, 1906, the cornerstone was laid and on December 17, 1907, the National Club's new premises opened. The following day,
The Globe newspaper described the new premises designed by noted Toronto architect
S. George Curry as “Architecturally... a triumph.” The firm of Sproatt & Rolph was responsible for designing a number of other Toronto landmarks, including
Hart House (University of Toronto), the Canada Life Building, the
Fairmont Royal York Hotel, Bishop Strachan School, Eaton's College Street store, and the Canada Permanent Trust building across the street from the National Club. The National Club is one of the few remaining intact buildings on Bay Street from this period. ==Today==