Many settlers made the trek from their distant
farms in the Highlands to revel in Nairobi during
Race Week. Some came to get supplies.
Others
came to drown their sorrows following the latest
crop failure, cattle disease, drought or flood.
The
only club available in those days was frequented
mainly by Government officials, authorities who
most settlers were at constant loggerheads with over their land policies.
As a result, the settlers decided to build their own
club on the other side of town.
They called it Muthaiga Country Club.
Barely had the Club opened when, in August
1914, British East Africa was thrust into war
against German East Africa and the majority of
Club members volunteered for active service to
the dismay of their families and demise of many
of their farms.
As a result, due to low utilisation,
the Club teetered on the brink of insolvency for
many of its formative years and, had it not been
for its major benefactor, Major James Archibald
Morrison, may never have survived.
Between the wars, Kenya’s reputation, or more
particularly that of the ‘Happy Valley’ set, grew as
an exclusive playground for a privileged few who,
unlike the majority of Club members who were
hard-working settlers, shed their clothes, morals
and inhibitions with equal alacrity in pursuit of
pleasure.
The advent of WWII in 1939 again drew a dark
cloud over the Club with numerous members
enlisting for military service in distant theatres of
war, many never to return.
Then, no sooner had WWII been won, a ‘wind
of change’ occurred that would bring many changes to both Kenya and the Club...