
Ladies could not be members of the club, but they could be extended club privileges if sponsored by a member. Dances were held at the club, as were "turning-out" parties for the season's debutantes. Lakeside Park opened to the public on Sunday, March 15, 1896, and was described in a news story in the Richmond Dispatch the day before:
Lakeside Park, the beautiful new northside resort, situated about five miles from the city, on the Brook Road, will be thrown open to the public tomorrow, and a large crowd is expected to use it. Within the enclosure are two large sheets of water, the clubhouse of the Lakeside bicycle club, a casino, cafe, bowling alley, billiard rooms, deer house, park office, and apartments for officers. The lake which is fed by springs, has been specially stocked with fish, and will be supplied with an abundance of rowboats, and a convenient and speedy two-horsepower naphtha launch. The cafe, billiard rooms, and bowling alleys are beautifully furnished and supplied with the most approved appointments. A large collection of water fowl will grace the lake, and a herd of seven deer will make their home in the grounds.