Cottage

Active

Address

University Cottage Club, 51 Prospect Avenue

GPS

40.348281117333, -74.651641434531

BOOK

Amory was far from contented. He missed the place he had won at St. Regis’, the being known and admired, yet Princeton stimulated him, and there were many things ahead calculated to arouse the Machiavelli latent in him, could he but insert a wedge.
The upper-class clubs, concerning which he had pumped a reluctant graduate during the previous summer, excited his curiosity: Ivy, detached and breathlessly aristocratic; Cottage, an impressive mélange of brilliant adventurers and well-dressed philanderers; Tiger Inn, broad-shouldered and athletic, vitalized by an honest elaboration of prep-school standards; Cap and Gown, anti-alcoholic, faintly religious and politically powerful; flamboyant Colonial; literary Quadrangle; and the dozen others, varying in age and position.

This side of Paradise

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

One of Princeton's eating clubs. Built in 1906, the current Cottage Club building was designed in 1903 by Charles Follen McKim in the Georgian Revival style. It is notable for its library, a place associated with the campus's literary history as it was one of the spaces where F. Scott Fitzgerald began writing "This Side of Paradise."

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