Baileys Beach
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Bailey's Beach (officially named as and owned by the Spouting Rock Beach Association) is a private beach and club in Newport, Rhode Island, United States.


History

According to the ''Providence Journal'', Bailey's Beach in Newport Rhode Island was:
founded in the 1890s after new trolley service gave mill workers from Fall River ready access to Easton's Beach, a wide expanse closer to downtown Newport that the well-to-do had claimed as their own. Not wishing to associate with people who took their lunches in buckets, high society relocated several miles to Spouting Rock, smaller and often seaweedy but safely beyond the reach of trolleys. Today, approximately 500 families belong, and for the most part, new members are added only when old ones die.
According to '' The New York Times'':
Spouting Rock Beach Association, named for a geological formation, and membership in it tends to define summer life here in ways that are sometimes difficult to comprehend, even for insiders.
The organization has attracted notable members of nearby families such as the Vanderbilt family, Astor family, and Sheldon Whitehouse. The
1938 Hurricane The 1938 New England Hurricane (also referred to as the Great New England Hurricane and the Long Island Express Hurricane) was one of the deadliest and most destructive tropical cyclones to strike Long Island, New York, and New England. The storm ...
destroyed the original clubhouse, and the current clubhouse and cabanas appear relatively modest to passersby. Bailey's Beach was one of the centers of elite Newport social life along with other institutions such as the
Redwood Library The Redwood Library and Athenaeum is a subscription library, museum, rare book repository and research center founded in 1747, and located at 50 Bellevue Avenue in Newport, Rhode Island. The building, designed by Peter Harrison and completed ...
, Newport Country Club, Trinity Church,
Clambake Club The Clambake Club of Newport is a historic private club at 353 Tuckerman Avenue in Middletown, Rhode Island. Building The club's main building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. It is located at the tip of Easton's ...
, Newport Reading Room, New York Yacht Club summer clubhouse and the Newport Casino.


Membership diversity

Local reporters have criticized Bailey's Beach for its alleged all-white membership, saying it lacked diversity. '' Newsweek'' magazine described it as an "elite all-white beach club" in its June 21, 2021, issue. Jack Nolan, the general manager of the beach club, denied the report, telling '' The Boston Globe'' two days later that members of the club and their families include people of "many racial, religious, and ethnic backgrounds from around the world who come to Newport every summer." Questioned about his family's membership, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) defended the club as "a long tradition in Rhode Island". Whitehouse also told the ''Globe'' he was not a member of the beach club, but his wife has been a member of the club for decades, and is currently one of the club’s largest shareholders. He stated that the club has "no discriminatory policy," and it has members who are people of color. Despite the exclusive status of the beach club and membership, the northeast end of the beach is open to the public and known colloquially as Rejects' Beach (or Reject's Beach or Rejects Beach).


See also

* Newport Reading Room


References


External links


Cliff Walk Website
{{Newport, Rhode Island Beaches of Rhode Island Buildings and structures in Newport, Rhode Island Landforms of Newport County, Rhode Island Geography of Newport, Rhode Island Clubs and societies in the United States