One of two bronze tigers flanking Nassau Hall’s front doorway (gift of the Class of 1879 in 1910) Second of two bronze tigers flanking Nassau Hall’s front doorway (gift of the Class of 1879 in 1910) Tiger head above the entrance of Cannon Dial Elm Club, facing north (1896) Little Hall, above the doorway on the east wall (1902) Tiger and monkeys, east side of 1879 Hall, on the archway to Prospect Street (1909) Arch connecting Campbell Hall and Joline Hall, north façade (1909) Guyot Hall, north side, over the doorway near Washington Road (1909) One of four tiger weather vanes on each of Holder Tower’s four corners (1910) Hamilton Hall, south façade (1911) Tower near the western end of Procter Hall, Graduate College (given by William C. Procter, Class of 1883, in 1913) Western façade of Procter Hall, Graduate College (1913) Window sill on the south wall of Foulke Hall (1922) Upper corner of a plaque, east side of Henry Hall (1922) Dormers on the east side of Henry Hall (1922) Brass weather vane, Henry Hall (1922) Lockhart Hall, inside north wall at ground level (1927) Bronze tiger in Palmer Square (given in honor of Edgar Palmer Class of 1903 in 1944) Corwin Hall, west entrance (1952) Sundial by Robert Venturi ’47, GS’50, south of Wu Hall (1983) One of two stainless steel tiger topiaries by Ruffin Hobbs, north entrance to Princeton Stadium (2001) Whitman College, embellishments to the plaque on Wendell Hall’s north side (2007) 1 / 21 Previous image Next image ︎ The Princeton campus abounds with tigers of all shapes and sizes.