Dutch Treat Club Explained

The Dutch Treat Club is a society of illustrators, writers and performers based in New York City. Primarily social in nature, the club has had as members such leading literary figures and humorists as Robert Benchley, Rube Goldberg, Robert M. McBride, and Ogden Nash.

Founding

In 1905, Tuesday was the day of the week when Life Magazine's editors, such as J. A. Mitchell reviewed the drawings and writings of their regular contributors.

Every Tuesday morning Life's anteroom would be thronged with clever illustrators chatting together sociably as they waited their turns to be ushered into the sanctum of "JAM", and writers waiting similarly for interviews with Thomas L. Masson, the literary editor. Since many of these contributors lived in the suburbs, it was natural that, being in town for the day, they should feel like having a good time in each other's company. And so the "gang" got the habit of lunching somewhere together, each paying for his own meal.

Life contributors brought friends who had no connection with that magazine. Numbers grew till one Tuesday the bunch organized themselves officially as the Dutch Treat Club, with Masson as President.[1]

The eleven founders included four writers, four illustrators, two editors and a publisher, among them:[2]

Past members

Steven Dohanos, illustrator, Saturday Evening Post 1940-50

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Armstrong, Ronald . Thirty-Fourth Street Midtown Association, Inc. . July–August 1924 . 10 . Little Old New York . II . 3 . Where Celebrities Foregather.
  2. Web site: History. Dutch Treat Club. 2008-08-08. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110707234542/http://dwp.bigplanet.com/dutchtreat/history/. 2011-07-07.