English Club of Pau
Private MembersThe English Club of Pau is a private social club in Pau, France. It owns and conserves a decorative arts and book collection listed as a French monument historique (ISMH). The English Club’s mission includes an annual open house during the Journées de Patrimoine and for reserved non-profit group tours, conferences, member publications and club member activities, all concentrated on the education and promotion of Pau’s former Anglo-American colony. It is housed at the Villa Lawrance by the City of Pau.

- Location
- Pau, France
- Established
- 1828
- Membership
- Private Members
- What is English Club of Pau?
- English Club of Pau is a private members' club in Pau, listed in The One Club directory of private members' clubs.
- Where is English Club of Pau?
- English Club of Pau is in Pau, France.
- When was English Club of Pau founded?
- English Club of Pau was founded in 1828.
- How do you become a member of English Club of Pau?
- Membership of English Club of Pau is arranged directly with the club. Private members' clubs typically admit new members by application, nomination or invitation.
More private members in France
Full directory →
Automobile Club of France
The Automobile Club of France (ACF) is a gentlemen's club founded on 12 November 1895 in Paris. It is notable for its influence on the early automotive industry and motorsport industries in France and throughout the world. It advocated for the use and acceptance of automobiles in street traffic through lobbying of government law and policy; and promoted automobile use in touring. Its members included prominent motor manufacturers, business leaders and racing drivers. The club was a founder member of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA).

Swedish Club in Paris
Paris Club is a group of major creditor countries aiming to provide a sustainable way to tackle debt problems in debtor countries.
Jockey-Club de Paris
The Jockey Club de Paris is a traditional gentlemen's club and is regarded as the most prestigious of private clubs in Paris. It is best remembered as a gathering place of the elite of nineteenth-century French society. Today it is decidedly but not exclusively aristocratic. The club seat is at 2, rue Rabelais in Paris, near the Champs-Élysées and it hosts the International Federation of Racing Authorities.