Princeton University. Property of the Trustees of Princeton University.
Source: Bric-a-Brac, 1904, p.216
Tower Club, founded in 1902, occupied no less than five separate structures in the first 15 years of its existence. The section that incorporated Tower was unable to use the Incubator, then inhabited by Charter, and so the club's first home was a building on University Place variously called "the Monastery" or "Bachelor's Club."
Little is known about this structure or its architect, although the photographic record shows an unremarkable shingle house of the style common in late 19th-century American domestic architecture. (This house was reportedly moved to Library Place in the 1920s.)
Tower Club, founded in 1902, occupied no less than five separate structures in the first 15 years of its existence. The section that incorporated Tower was unable to use the Incubator, then inhabited by Charter, and so the club's first home was a building on University Place variously called "the Monastery" or "Bachelor's Club."
Little is known about this structure or its architect, although the photographic record shows an unremarkable shingle house of the style common in late 19th-century American domestic architecture. (This house was reportedly moved to Library Place in the 1920s.)