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Multnomah Athletic Club

Private club in Portland, Oregon, U.S.

Multnomah Athletic Club

Summary

Private club in Portland, Oregon, U.S.

FieldValue
nameMultnomah Athletic Club
imageMultnomah_Athletic_Club_in_1910.jpg
image_size280px
captionMultnomah Athletic Club's clubhouse in 1910
logo_size129
logo_caption2020 MAC Winged M
abbreviationM.A.C.
formationFebruary 1891
typeSocial and recreational club
registration_id93-0232310
locationPortland, Oregon, United States
coords
membership"21,000+"
(June 2024)
key_peopleKen Meyer (president)
Victor Perry (vice president)
revenue$52.1 million
revenue_year2023
website

(June 2024) Victor Perry (vice president)

The Multnomah Athletic Club (MAC) is a private social and athletic club in Portland, Oregon, United States. It was founded in 1891 as the Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club, a coordinating body for team and individual sports such as track and field, football, and basketball and fielded its own competitive teams against collegiate competition. It is currently a 21,000 member institution, providing athletic and dining facilities to its dues-payers.

History

The Multnomah Athletic Club was originally founded in 1891 as the Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club. It is located in Portland, Oregon's Goose Hollow neighborhood, occupying two buildings adjacent to the Providence Park sports stadium.

The club hosted an annual outdoor athletic games in Portland, with the inaugural event taking place in September 1891. The event included a traditional spectrum of track and field events, including sprints, middle distance races, and a one-mile run, hurdling, high and long jumping, pole vaulting, the hammer throw and shot put, as well as a one-mile race walk and a two-mile bicycle race. These annual competitions were open to any member of a valid athletic club, military unit, or institution of higher learning.

Bicycle racing was an important part of the club's activities during its first decade, with one of its members claiming world records in the one-mile and ten-mile bicycle race from a standing start in 1894.

Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club also served as the organizer of its own teams, playing football against other clubs from its inception. Chief rivals on the gridiron during the ensuing two decades included the teams of the Seattle Athletic Club and Spokane Amateur Athletic Club; regular games against Oregon college teams were also played.

The entrance to the Multnomah Athletic Club photographed in 2014.

The club is known for its exclusivity and was historically male-dominated. Women members were not given full voting privileges until 1977. Jews were also not allowed to be a MAC member until 1958.

New memberships are chosen by a lottery, however applicants who don't know a current member may be asked to present a reference letter.

It has been called "the only club in town that matters" and Nike had paid for one of its former executive's MAC membership on company expense to "help him integrate into the Portland business community"

The general manager's salary in 2017 was around $719,000, which makes his salary among the highest non-profit executive salary in Portland outside of the medical sector.

Facilities

The club's primary facility is an eight-level main clubhouse located adjacent to Providence Park. The club's facilities total 600000 sqft, making it the largest indoor athletic club in the world.

References

References

  1. [https://web.archive.org/web/20240602125233/https://themac.com/ "Welcome to the Multnomah Athletic Club,"] https://themac.com/, June 2, 2024.
  2. (2023). "Nonprofit Explorer; Multnomah Athletic Club". ProPublica.
  3. [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal-multnomah-amateur-at/149005603/ "Athletics,"] [Salem, OR] ''Capital Journal,'' Aug. 25, 1891, p. 3.
  4. [https://www.newspapers.com/article/statesman-journal-sixth-of-ten-bicycle-r/149007941/ "The Race Tonight,"] [Salem, OR] ''Daily Oregon Statesman,'' Aug. 7, 1894, p. 4.
  5. C.N. MacArthur, "Foot Ball in the Pacific Northwest," in Walter Camp (ed.), ''Spalding's Official Foot Ball Guide, 1907.'' New York: American Sports Publishing Co., 1907; p. 81.
  6. (January 17, 2007). "Rogue of the Week: Multnomah Athletic Club". [[Willamette Week]].
  7. (2016-07-26). "Is it True That the Multnomah Athletic Club did not Allow Jews to Become Members Until the 1970s?".
  8. "What's the Deal with Portland's Exclusive Old Private Clubs?".
  9. Budnick, Nick. (August 28, 2006). "MAC to the future". [[Portland Tribune]]}}{{deadlink.
  10. Leder, Michelle. (2006-08-20). "OPENERS: SUITS; JUST OVERDO IT". The New York Times.
  11. (2019-06-26). "Longtime Multnomah Athletic Club General Manager Norm Rich Set to Resign in July".
  12. "History - MAC".
  13. Anderson, Heather Arndt. (2015-12-17). "Inside the Best Portland Restaurant Where You'll Never Get to Eat".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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