Alibi Club

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Group.png Alibi Club  
(Private club)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Alibi Club - Washington, D.C..jpg
Formation1884
Membership•  David M. Abshire
•  David Acheson
• Dean Acheson.jpg Dean Acheson
• Theodor achilles.png Theodore Achilles
•  Lamar Alexander
•  Chandler Anderson
•  Larz Anderson
•  Warren R. Austin
•  Truxtun Beale
•  Gist Blair
•  Robert Woods Bliss
•  Frederick N. Brooke
•  David K.E. Bruce
• George H. W. Bush.jpg George H.W. Bush
• PrescottBush.jpg Prescott Bush
•  George E. Corcoran
•  Thomas Gardiner Corcoran
•  Dwight F. Davis
• Allen w dulles.jpg Allen Dulles
• 5141136-3x2-700x467.jpg John Foster Dulles
•  James Dunn
•  Walter Edge
•  George A. Garrett
•  Charles C. Glover III
• Gordon Gray.jpg Gordon Gray
•  Cary Grayson
•  Joseph Grew
• Alfred Maximilian Gruenther.jpg Alfred Gruenther
•  Frederick Hale
•  George Hamilton Jr.
•  Nelson Hartson
• Christian Herter.jpg Christian Herter
•  William Hibbs
•  Archibald Hopkins
•  Walter Bruce Howe
•  David B Karrick
•  Samuel Kaufman
•  John Kean
•  Emory S. Land
•  Nicholas Longworth
• Robert A. Lovett.jpg Robert A. Lovett
•  George C. Marshall
•  Clarence Moore
•  Benjamin Mosby McKelway
•  John Lord O'Brian
•  Thomas Nelson Page
•  Stanley F. Reed
•  Henry Roosevelt
•  Jules Henri de Sibour
•  Potter Stewart
•  James W. Symington
•  Maxwell Taylor
•  J.W. Wadsworth
•  John F. Wilkins
•  Clarence R. Wilson
•  Blanton Winship
•  Jerauld Wright
•  William M. Wright
•  Vishnu V. Ramaswamy
•  John Adams Bross
•  C. Boyden Gray
a 50-member private, traditional club in Washington, D.C. ts members comprise of the Washington elite, including presidents, senators, among other prominent figures.

The Alibi Club is a private, traditional private club in Washington, D.C. Its members comprise of the Washington elite, including presidents, senators,[1] and diplomats,[2] among other prominent figures. In 2018 the property was listed as "vacant", and it is not known if it continues in another location.

History

In 1884, seven Washingtonians founded the Alibi Club, a private social club consisting of prominent political and social figures. Its name derived from the club practice of providing an alibi when the whereabouts of a member was questioned by the member's family. The club's founding purpose was to foster "mutual improvement, education, and enlightenment" among members of Washington society. Membership also extended to out of town figures from New York City, Boston and Philadelphia, most likely to share information between communities and help in the development of strategies to address civic issues. Throughout its history, it has hosted numerous world leaders, including King Leopold of Belgium, Prince Albert of Belgium, Prince Henry of Prussia, and Viceroy Li Hung Chang.[3]

Clubhouse

The first clubhouse was situated at 17th and Pennsylvania Avenue, NW. Since 1886, the club has occupied a three-story, brick townhouse blocks away from the White House. The clubhouse is furnished with donated memorabilia and artifacts that cover nearly every available section of wall on the first two floors. The clubhouse is also notable as a well-preserved example of residential architecture in a commercial district, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on October 21, 1994.[4] In 2018 the building was listed as a vacant property.[5]

Membership

Membership is limited to fifty, with new members admitted upon unanimous vote after the death of a previous member. Membership is not revealed to outsiders, and the first public notice of membership is often in a member's obituary.[1]

The list has included at least four CIA directors, four Supreme Court justices, three former secretaries of state, three secretaries of war or defense and many supreme military commanders, doctors, lawyers and department chiefs.

Some of the Alibi Club's most prominent members have included: President George H.W. Bush,[6] his father, Senator Prescott Bush, Supreme Court Justices Potter Stewart and Stanley F. Reed, Allen Dulles and John Foster Dulles, Speaker of the House Nicholas Longworth, and General George C. Marshall.[7]

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Known members

13 of the 61 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
David AbshireSpooky US diplomat with connections to "Iran-Contra"
Dean AchesonUS deep state operative who was the 51st Secretary of State
Theodore AchillesVery closely connected to the creation NATO
George H. W. BushSkull and bones mastermind of the bush family busine$$.
Prescott BushBonesman father of the Bush family
Tommy Corcoran
Allen DullesDulles served the longest ever term as Director of Central Intelligence and dominated American intelligence for a generation. He personified a cadre of Ivy League pragmatic elitists in high echelons of the government who greatly admired Germany’s scientific achievements.<a href="#cite_note-1">[1]</a> Dulles was fired by JFK after the Bay of Pigs and bore a grudge against him thereafter.
John Foster DullesUS lawyer turned deep politician, brother of Allen Dulles
C. Boyden GrayGeorge H. W. Bush's White House Counsel
Gordon GraySpooky US National Security Advisor
Christian HerterUnited States Secretary of State. Double Bilderberger
Robert A. Lovett
George Marshall
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References

  1. a b c https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/09/AR2009050902338.html
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  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20180614134344/http://dcist.com/2018/06/what_happened_to_the_alibi_club.php
  6. a b https://www.nytimes.com/1989/02/01/us/bush-belongs-to-3-men-s-clubs.html
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  8. http://www.georgebushfoundation.org/Page.aspx?pid=326 ConocoPhillips White House Lecture Series - 10/26/2005: David M. Abshire
  9. http://dcchs.org/DavidCAcheson/DavidCAcheson_Complete.pdf DAVID C. ACHESON, ESQUIRE: Oral History, Project Historical Society of the District of Columbia Circuit Pg. 35
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