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Princeton Reunions and the P-rade A Photographic Timeline

on display in the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library

Alumni reunions date back to Princeton's earliest years, when the entire College of New Jersey, as it was then known, was housed in Nassau Hall. The close association of students who so intimately lived and attended classes together in the same building gave birth to a spirit of camaraderie that continued after they left.

Soon after the Civil War, alumni coming to Commencement Day spontaneously took part in a procession that led to a dinner meeting wherein guests listened to a variety of alumni speeches. By the turn of the 20th century, Reunions had become a robust convention that began as long as a week before Commencement. Admission was restricted to alumni, but families were invited to watch the Princeton-Yale baseball game, a rivalry that began in 1868. The Saturday afternoon game became the focal point of reunions and, as alumni attendance grew, occasional classes would hire a band to lead their group the playing field, and often children of the alumni were included in the march. It was from this impromptu procession that the P-rade was born.

The route has varied over the decades, but currently the P-rade begins at FitzRandolph Gate and proceeds around Nassau Hall, past Cannon Green and East Pyne to Chapel Drive and Elm Drive, culminating on Poe and Pardee fields. Originally, the alumni marched to University Field, the site of the Princeton-Yale baseball game. When the University built the Engineering Quadrangle on the site in 1960, the route was changed to end at Clarke Field. The Alumni Council has tried a variety of routes since, now ending with a brief Alumni Association meeting instead of the baseball game. Later that evening are a lawn concert and a grand fireworks display at Finney and Campbell Fields.

Credits

Vanessa Haight, Senior Conservation Technician

Susan Hamson, Project Archivist, Princeton University Archives Project

Matthew Reeder, Special Collections Assistant (Narratives)

Rosemary Switzer, Special Collections Assistant (Artifact Selection)

Rosalba Varallo, Special Collections Assistant (Image Selection)

Additional thanks to Nancy Shader, Archivist for Public Services, and
Dan Linke, University Archivist and Curator of Public Policy Papers,
for their feedback and assistance.

Tiger graphic courtesy Animation Factory