The Stock Exchange Luncheon Club was a members-only dining club, on the seventh floor of the New York Stock Exchange Building at 11 Wall Street in Manhattan. The club was founded on August 3, 1898, and moved from 70 Broadway to 11 Wall Street when the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) opened its new building in 1903. It closed on April 28, 2006, after more than a century of service. The club had an inaugural membership of 200, with a "long waiting list", when it first opened as the Luncheon Club at 70 Broadway and 15 New Street, Manhattan. Joseph L. Searles III, who became the first African American member of the NYSE when he joined in 1970, said that his "biggest fear...was where would I sit in the luncheon club?". The situation was resolved when Searles was given his own table by the club, and he dined alone for a while. A ladies' restroom was installed in the club as late as 1987, some twenty years after women were first admitted to the NYSE. In 1999, the club had more than 1,400 members, and was lavishly decorated with various animal heads, most shot by members on safari. In August 2001, the Stock Exchange Luncheon Club served as the venue for the presentation of custom-made motorized wheelchairs to 17 quadraplegic in-patients of a local hospital for paralyzed people. A fund-raising event was held by the New York City Police Foundation at the club in November 2003. Following security measures put in place at the NYSE, after the September 11 attacks, the club became less accessible, and this, coupled with the ousting of regular patron Richard Grasso from the head of the NYSE, and a decline in similar local dining clubs, was cited as a factor in the club's demise when it closed in 2006. The space continued to be used for important events for example, the NYSE shareholder vote to merge with Euronext on December 19, 2006.

1. See also

List of restaurants in New York City New York Stock Exchange

1. References


1. External links

The New York Times, "Where Wall Street Meets to Eat, the Last Lunch", April 28, 2006, by Peter Edmonston. O'Rourke, P.J. Eat the Rich: A Treatise on Economics, 1999.

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35 m

New York Stock Exchange

Le New York Stock Exchange ou NYSE (communément appelée Bourse de New York en français), aussi appelé Wall Street, fondée en 1792 est la plus importante bourse de valeurs des États-Unis. C'est aussi la plus importante bourse au monde, avec une capitalisation totale dépassant les 30 000 milliards de dollars en 2025. Le NYSE présente la particularité de fonctionner en partie physiquement avec des traders sur place. Son grand concurrent, le NASDAQ, est lui 100 % électronique. Le principal indice du NYSE est le Dow Jones Industrial Average, qui regroupe les 30 plus grosses entreprises du NYSE selon leur capitalisation boursière. Les échanges sur le NYSE se déroulent du lundi au vendredi entre 9 h 30 et 16 h (heure locale), ce qui correspond en heure normale d'Europe centrale à un créneau entre 15 h 30 et 22 h. Le commerce des actions se fait au 11, Wall Street, alors que le siège du NYSE se trouve à proximité, dans le quartier financier du sud de Manhattan, au 18, Broad Street. Le NYSE est la propriété de l'entreprise Intercontinental Exchange (ICE).
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30 Broad Street

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1 Wall Street

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