Cloister Inn

United States historic place From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cloister Innmap

Cloister Inn is one of the undergraduate eating clubs at Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey, United States.

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Cloister Inn
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Location65 Prospect Ave, Princeton, New Jersey
Coordinates40°20′55.0″N 74°39′02.0″W
Built1924
ArchitectAlbert Relsen
Architectural styleCollegiate Gothic
Part ofPrinceton Historic District (ID75001143[1])
Added to NRHP27 June 1975
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Founded in 1912, Cloister occupies a neo-Gothic building on Prospect Avenue, between Cap and Gown Club and Charter Club. Cloister closed temporarily in 1972, becoming open to all Princeton alumni, before reopening as an undergraduate club in 1977. The club is "sign-in", meaning that it selects its members from a lottery process rather than the bicker process used by several of the eating clubs.[2] Cloister typically attracts an athletic crowd and its members often include a number of Olympians. The official motto of the club is “Where everybody knows your name”.[3]

History

Cloister Inn was founded in 1912. The present building was constructed in 1924.

It was designed by architects R.H. Scannell and Charles Lewis Bowman NRHP

Cloister received mention in Ian Caldwell and Dustin Thomason's 2004 bestselling novel The Rule of Four. Caldwell, a 1998 graduate of Princeton, was a member of Cloister.[4]

Notable alumni

Business

Literature and the arts

Politics, government, and public affairs

Sport

References

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