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Category: Campus Life

  • Princeton’s East College: Horses, Cannons, and Ghosts

    By Iliyah Coles ’22 East College, built in 1833, was Princeton’s first building solely used to house students. It stood across from West College (now Morrison Hall) and Cannon Green, and the Bulletin Elm once stretched from East College to the Old Chapel. Before its demolition in 1897, East College had been the site of…

  • Dear Mr. Mudd: Who Was Princeton’s First International Student?

    Dear Mr. Mudd, Can you tell me who Princeton’s first international student was? Were there international students in the first graduating class?   As with all questions about “firsts,” this one is too complicated to answer simply with someone’s name. We are aware that our records aren’t comprehensive, so we can only provide what we…

  • Dear Mr. Mudd: Why Was There a Woman in Princeton University’s Texas Club Before Coeducation?

    Dear Mr. Mudd, Looking at the photograph posted on the Princeton University Archives Tumblr of the Texas Club in 1960, I see a woman, but Princeton wasn’t fully coeducational until 1969. Where did she come from? Although to some extent this woman remains a mystery to us as well, there are other women we can…

  • The “Down South Kitchen” and Family Life in Princeton University’s Isabella McCosh Infirmary

    When I wrote about the myth of slave quarters in Princeton University dormitories, there wasn’t room to tell you about the service workers who did sleep under the same roof as Princeton students for half a century. Today’s post considers the home one Black family made at Isabella McCosh Infirmary while they cooked and cleaned…

  • Dear Mr. Mudd: How Did Princeton Students Treat Campus Servants?

    This post is the second in a two-part series. Dear Mr. Mudd, If Princeton University dormitories could not have housed enslaved persons, why does the rumor persist that they did? What were the experiences of campus servants really like? How did students treat them?   Last week, I outlined the factual evidence that proves that…

  • Dear Mr. Mudd: Did Enslaved People Live in Princeton’s Dormitories?

    This post is the first in a two-part series.   Dear Mr. Mudd, Rumor has it the dorms at Princeton were designed to allow students to bring enslaved people with them to live in adjoining rooms and serve them. Is this true?   Though one often hears a rumor about enslaved people accompanying students to…

  • When the Great Blizzard of 1888 Hit Princeton

    One of the worst storms ever to hit the United States is typically known as “Great Blizzard of 1888,” but you may find it referred to as the “Great White Hurricane.” In it, Princeton students played a historic role in rescuing passengers aboard a train stuck in a snowbank, people were trapped inside for a…

  • Foodways for Princeton Students, Part II: Diversified Menus, 1855-2010s

    This is the second post in a two-part series examining student foodways at Princeton. As mentioned in the conclusion of last week’s post in this series, the campus refectory was no longer an option after the Nassau Hall fire of 1855. This meant that eating clubs became entrenched in Princeton’s traditions. There were many transient…

  • Foodways for Princeton Students, Part I: The Refectory, 1760s-1855

    Foodways for Princeton Students, Part I: The Refectory, 1760s-1855

    This post is the first in a two-part series examining daily foodways at Princeton. Today, most Princetonians are likely to take it for granted that they can have a bagel with cream cheese and lox in the morning, pick up Chinese takeout for lunch, and relax over a dinner of spaghetti, but all of these…

  • The Horses of Princeton

    When we say someone or something is a “workhorse” these days, it signifies working hard for a long time, but we rarely mean an animal. For most of Princeton’s past, however, this term would have referred to literal horses. Horses were a vital part of daily life well into the 20th century.