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Founded in 1891,
“The MAC” has become
Oregon’s and one of
the nation’s most
storied athletic
clubs, and has
shaped the course of
the state’s sports
world for more than
a century. The club
was incorporated on
February 28, 1891
through the efforts
of 26 amateur sports
athletes and
enthusiasts, led by
photographer Arthur
B. McAlpin. They
spun off from a
group of 150 men who
had contentiously
met earlier in the
week to form just
such a club.
The Multnomah
Amateur Athletic
Club charged an
initiation fee of
$10. In a month, the
club had grown to
200 members and the
initiation fee had
grown to $25.
In April, the
club leased the
third-floor of a
building in downtown
Portland and
proceeded to
purchase equipment
from the
Chicago-based
Spalding Company,
and then hired a
gymnastics
instructor. The club
also featured a room
with three billiards
tables.
The MAAC delved
into team
competition in
summer with the
formation of a
baseball team and
formed a football
team in fall. It
also sponsored
athletes for
individual
competitions and
created events that
attracted
competitors from
throughout the West,
including Vancouver,
B.C. From its first
game against the
Tacoma Athletic
Club, the MAAC’s
football team
developed a national
reputation for
success, posting a
record of 58 wins,
17 losses and 13
ties through 1905.
It regularly played
college programs,
including a loss to
Stanford in 1894.
Members of the
MAAC competed in
events from the
athletic spectrum,
from shooting to
swimming to cycling
to bowling from its
opening. The club
also developed its
social side,
sponsoring smokers,
cultural exhibitions
and events such as
“Ladies Nights,”
throughout its first
decade. The club
sent the first of
its members to an
Olympic Games in
1906.
The club
constructed its
first clubhouse at
Southwest 10th and
Yamhill in 1900 on
land it purchased
the previous year.
At the time, the
club promoted
regular bathing,
which it promoted as
decreasing ailments,
and charged members
for towels.
The club
removed “amateur”
from its name in
1936. Since its
beginnings, dozens
of club members have
competed in Olympics
Games. It has built
and rebuilt several
clubhouses,
including two
destroyed by fire,
and constructed the
concrete grandstand
for Multnomah
Stadium in 1926. The
grandstand is still
in use as part of
Jeld-Wen Field.
The club even
survived a movement
that would have made
it a social club in
the early 1960s. It
required members,
starting in 1965, to
be talented
athletes, and
expanded its
clubhouse through
the sale of
Multnomah Stadium to
the City of Portland
for $2.1 million in
1966.
Membership has
surpassed 20,000 and
the current
clubhouse of 550,000
square feet has
allowed it to be
called the largest
indoor athletic club
in the world. It was
inducted to the
Oregon Sports Hall
of Fame in 1984.
Amazingly, the
club’s emblem,
“Winged M,” has
remained virtually
unchanged since its
creation shortly
after the club
opened.
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