Princeton Club
Defunct
They went out very little: to an occasional play, or to dinner at the Ritz or the Princeton Club. With prohibition the great rendezvous had received their death wounds; no longer could one wander to the Biltmore bar at twelve or five and find congenial spirits, and both Tom and Amory had outgrown the passion for dancing with mid-Western or New Jersey debbies at the Club-de-Vingt (surnamed the “Club de Gink”) or the Plaza Rose Room—besides even that required several cocktails “to come down to the intellectual level of the women present,” as Amory had once put it to a horrified matron.
This side of Paradise
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
Founded in 1866 as the Princeton Alumni Association of New York, it reorganized in 1886 as the Princeton Club of New York and was legally constituted as a club on 12 December 1899. It was conceived as a social and recreational club to maintain Princeton community life in the city, offering a meeting point for alumni and faculty. Over its lifetime it had four headquarters, the last on West 44th Street—an axis known as “Clubhouse Row” because several university clubs were grouped there. The club closed in March 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and never reopened.
