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Cleveland Athletic Club

Coordinates: 41°30′00.7″N 81°41′04.9″W / 41.500194°N 81.684694°W / 41.500194; -81.684694
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Cleveland Athletic Club
Cleveland Athletic Club is located in Ohio
Cleveland Athletic Club
Cleveland Athletic Club is located in the United States
Cleveland Athletic Club
Location1118 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio
Coordinates41°30′00.7″N 81°41′04.9″W / 41.500194°N 81.684694°W / 41.500194; -81.684694
Built1911
ArchitectJ. Milton Dyer
Architectural styleNeoclassical
Part ofEuclid Avenue Historic District (ID02000702)

The Cleveland Athletic Club (CAC) was a historic organization founded in 1908. Founding members included Mayor Charles A. Otis, Walter Baker, and Elbert Baker; banker William Parmalee Murray was its first president.[1]

In 1911 the organization commissioned a 15-story social club building at 1118 Euclid Avenue,[2] a structure with facilities for its boxing tournaments, office space, a 12-room hotel, a dining room, an eight-lane bowling alley, a basketball court, and many other amenities. Olympic and Hollywood swimmer Johnny Weissmueller broke the record for the 15-yard backstroke in the club's penthouse pool in 1922.[3]

The architect was J. Milton Dyer, who also designed the Cleveland City Hall. Murals in the club were among the first commissions of American muralist William P. Welsh. The building is a contributing property to the city's Euclid Avenue Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places, and a part of the Nine-Twelve District as designated by the Downtown Cleveland Alliance.

The club was in financial difficulty in 2007.[4] It closed its doors permanently on December 31, 2007, because of "sagging membership and financial problems".[5]

In 2015, the building was sold for $3.3 million in a sheriff's sale, with announced plans for its conversion into a residential or mixed-use property.[6] As of early 2020 the building had been extensively renovated into a luxury apartment building called "The Athlon".[7]

Another, earlier Cleveland Athletic Club was established in 1890, with early baseball executive Frank Robison as its president.[8] Despite an impressive new headquarters in the former Dodge mansion at 500 Euclid Avenue, and despite a large membership, it appears to have faded after 1895.

References

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  1. ^ http://ech.case.edu/cgi/article.pl?id=CAC4 Cleveland Athletic Club Retrieved on 2015-09-11
  2. ^ Emporis.com[usurped] Cleveland Athletic Club Retrieved on 2015-09-11
  3. ^ http://www.cacclub.com/CAC_Files/CAC%20News%20&%20History/CAC%20History.pdf Cleveland Athletic Club History Retrieved on 2015-09-11
  4. ^ Karl Turner [1] July 11, 2007 The Plain Dealer
  5. ^ "Athletic Club Closes Amid Financial Woes". Mansfield, Ohio News-Journal (via newspapers.com). January 2, 2008. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  6. ^ Bullard, S. N.J.-based Waring Investments to become new owner of 15-story Cleveland Athletic Club building http://www.crainscleveland.com/article/20150309/FREE/150309839/n-j-based-waring-investments-to-become-new-owner-of-15-story Retrieved on 2015-09-11
  7. ^ Carpenter, Kevin. "Renovating the Historic Cleveland Athletic Club". Cleveland Magazine. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  8. ^ "Men of Muscle Happy - Handsome New Home of Cleveland Athletic Club". Lancaster (Pennsylvania) Intelligencer (via newspapers.com). February 28, 1891. Retrieved September 23, 2020.