The earliest social clubs on the Princeton campus, named "The Well-Meaning Club" and "The Plain-Dealing Club", were founded in the 1760s. These clubs were banned due to dispensary-related reasons but later reemerged as the American Whig Society ("Whig") and the Cliosophic Society ("Clio"). Members of the two societies, which accounted for the majority of the student body, engaged in vigorous competition for recognition in sports as well as campus honors. During the early days of Princeton University, the Whig and Clio societies dominated the social life and activities of the student body. The first eating clubs emerged under this context as small informal dining societies, in which Princeton students gathered to take meals at a common table and often disbanded when the founders graduated. In 1843
Beta Theta Pi, a national fraternity at the time, founded a chapter on the Princeton campus, which was soon followed by nine more organizations. Fraternities and secret societies were banned from Princeton soon after, with the exception of the university's political, literary, and debating societies. The banning of fraternities, which lasted until the 1980s, gave way for eating clubs to gradually take on the role of social organizations. A fire that damaged the University's refectory in 1856 caused a major rise in student membership in eating clubs. Towards the end of the 19th century the eating clubs began to recruit new members as old ones left and also began to lease or buy permanent facilities.
Ivy Club was the first of the permanent eating clubs. It was followed shortly after by
University Cottage Club. This process was greatly aided by
Moses Taylor Pyne, who provided financial assistance to most of the eating clubs. An early member of
Ivy Club, Pyne was heavily involved in the early development of
Cap and Gown Club,
Campus Club, Elm Club, Cloister Inn, and many others. The new clubs (along with other new extracurricular activities) gradually eroded the central role that debate societies Whig and Clio played in undergraduate student life. The decline in popularity and energy of the societies led to their merger into the
American Whig-Cliosophic Society, which still exists today. Twenty eating clubs have existed since Ivy Club opened in 1879, though never more than 18 at any one time. At various points, many of the eating clubs fell on hard times and closed their doors or merged with others. The now-defunct eating clubs include Campus Club, Key and Seal Club, Arch Club, Gateway Club, Court Club, Arbor Inn, and Prospect Club. Dial, Elm, and Cannon Clubs merged to form DEC Club, which operated from 1990 to 1998. The most recent club to close was Campus Club, which shut down in 2005. The eating clubs and their members have figured prominently among Princeton alumni active in careers in literature and the performing arts. For example, the distinguished Pulitzer Prize writer
Booth Tarkington, who transformed the Drama Association into the
Princeton Triangle Club, was a prominent member of Ivy Club.
F. Scott Fitzgerald was a member of the University Cottage Club. The actors
Jimmy Stewart and
David Duchovny were members of the Charter Club, and the actors
Dean Cain and
Brooke Shields were members of Cap and Gown. Eating clubs have sometimes closed and returned to active life. The Cloister Club was reopened in the 1970s and continues successfully. Some closed eating clubs have been purchased by the university for use as academic and administrative buildings. Dial Lodge is now the
Bendheim Center for Finance; Elm Club temporarily housed the Classics Department and European Cultural Studies Program and is the new home of the Carl A. Fields Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding. The donation of Campus Club to the university for use as a space for social events was completed in 2006. Cannon Club was briefly converted into Notestein Hall, an office for the University Writing Center, but has since been repurchased by alumni. The club was reopened as Cannon Dial Elm Club in fall 2011. In 1979, undergraduate
Sally Frank filed suit against then all-male clubs Ivy Club, Cottage Club, and Tiger Inn for sex discrimination. While Cottage chose to coeducate during the intervening years, Ivy Club and Tiger Inn were forced to become co-ed organizations in 1991, 22 years after Princeton first admitted female students, after their appeal to the Supreme Court regarding Frank's lawsuit was denied. The eating clubs have attracted controversy, being viewed as outdated,
elitist institutions (
Woodrow Wilson was, in part, driven from Princeton by alumni and administrators because he loathed the effect the clubs had on academic and social life). A major part of the controversy was the difference in cost between joining an eating club and buying a university dining plan. By 2006, the difference was over $2,000 for most clubs, and this difference was not covered by university
financial aid. In November 2006, Princeton administrators announced that they would increase upperclass financial aid packages by $2,000, in order to cover the difference in costs. However, as of December 2009, there was still a "significant discrepancy" between the university financial aid package and the cost of some clubs.
Historical list of clubs Timeline Preset = TimeHorizontal_AutoPlaceBars_UnitYear ImageSize = width:900 Colors = id:lightgray value:gray(0.8) id:darkgray value:gray(0.5) BackgroundColors = canvas:white Period = from:1870 till:2016 Define $now = 2015 # Current academic year Define $skip = at:end # Force a blank line ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:10 start:1870 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:1870 LineData = at:1900 color:darkgray layer:back width:1 at:2000 color:darkgray layer:back width:1 BarData= barset:Clubs PlotData= width:15 fontsize:S textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(10,-4) color:orange barset:Clubs from:1879 till:$now text:
The Ivy Club from:1886 till:$now text:
University Cottage Club from:1890 till:$now text:
Tiger Inn from:1890 till:$now text:
Cap and Gown Club from:1891 till:$now text:
Colonial Club from:1895 till:1975 text:Cannon Club from:1895 till:1973 text:Elm Club from:1900 till:2005 text:
Campus Club from:1901 till:$now text:
Princeton Charter Club from:1901 till:$now text:
Quadrangle Club from:1902 till:$now text:
Princeton Tower Club from:1904 till:$now text:
Terrace Club from:1904 till:1968 text:Key and Seal Club from:1907 till:1988 text:Dial Lodge from:1911 till:1917 text:Arch Club from:1912 till:1972 text:
Cloister Inn from:1913 till:1937 text:Gateway Club from:1921 till:1964 text:Court Club from:1923 till:1939 text:Arbor Inn from:1990 till:1998 text:DEC barset:break $skip $skip $skip $skip $skip from:1990 till:1998 text:DEC from:1978 till:1989 from:1990 till:1998 text:DEC $skip $skip $skip $skip $skip $skip from:1990 till:1998 text:DEC $skip from:1977 till:$now from:1941 till:1959 text:Prospect Club barset:break $skip $skip $skip $skip $skip $skip barset:break $skip $skip $skip $skip $skip from:2011 till:$now text:CDE ==Joining clubs==