Hasty Pudding Club
The Hasty Pudding Club, often referred to simply as the Pudding, is a social club at Harvard University, and one of three sub-organizations that comprise the Hasty Pudding - Institute of 1770. The club's motto, Concordia Discors (discordant harmony), derives from the epistles of the Latin poet Horace.
Hasty Pudding Club | |
U.S. National Register of Historic Places | |
Former location of the Hasty Pudding Club at 12 Holyoke Street | |
Location | 45 Dunster Street Cambridge, Massachusetts |
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Coordinates | 42°22′19″N 71°07′10″W |
Built | 1888 |
Architect | Peabody and Stearns |
NRHP reference No. | 78000442 |
Added to NRHP | January 9. 1978 |
The year of founding for the club is usually given as 1795, when a group of undergraduates came together "to cherish feelings of friendship and patriotism," or as 1770, the founding year for the Institute of 1770, an organization that the Pudding absorbed in 1924. By way of this amalgamation, the Pudding claims to be the oldest collegiate social club in the United States.
Historically, the club has been noted for its "prestigious" reputation and viewed as "the first step towards final club membership." An 1870 travel book listed the Hasty Pudding Club and the Porcellian Club as "the two lions of Harvard."