“Preppies: The Last Upper Class?”
By Nelson W. Aldrich, Jr.
Atlantic Monthly, January 1979 (excerpts)
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Nelson W.
Aldrich Jr. on Preppies
August 8,
2025
https://www.ivy-style.com/thirty-years-later-aldrich-on-preppies.html
Mentioned
recently in the post “Searching For The P In WASP,” this 1979 cover story on
preppies is one of the most important historical documents on Ivy Style. It’s
situated between the end of the heyday of the Ivy League Look and the preppy
trend of the 1980s. It was first posted here in 2009 and is long overdue for a
revisit.
* * *
Almost
two years before “The Official Preppy Handbook” made preppy affectation
accessible to all, Nelson W. Aldrich Jr. had already caught wind of the
zeitgeist.
His
January 1979 cover story for the Atlantic Monthly, “Preppies: The Last Upper
Class?” is a seminal work of exposition on the manners and mores of the WASP
establishment. It is also helpful in filling out the dark years between the
fall of the Ivy League Look circa 1965, and the revival of what remained of it,
combined with new styles and attitudes picked up during an intense period of
social change, in November 1980 with the publication of “The Official Preppy
Handbook.”
In honor
of the article’s 30th anniversary, Ivy-Style herein presents this largely
forgotten historic document now digitized for the Internet.
In the
article, Aldrich — who authored the book “Old Money” and edited the oral
history of George Plimpton Ivy-Style wrote about a while back — attempts to
outline the behavioral characteristics of the prep-school set, their likes and
dislikes, values and revulsions. Aldrich links the ideology of the preppy to
his forbearer, the WASP, to whom the preppy owes his austerity, deference, and
attitude toward money.
Aldrich
devotes only a few paragraphs to preppy clothing; in his view the term
“preppie” designates a group of people, not simply a style of dress. When he
does mention clothes, he does so to illustrate the insularity of preppy
society, in which the tiniest modifications of attire can carry great
significance.
Worth
noting is the passage in which Alrich argues that the distinguishing sartorial
details of preppy style — presumably things like hooked vents, lapped seams and
two-button cuffs, or perhaps embroidered whale belts — are relished by
outsiders once they’ve figured out the secret code, but viewed as “oppressive”
by the preppies expected to follow the code.
Along
those lines, the famous preppy nonchalance envied by all may not come as easily
as it appears. Writes Aldrich:
For the
Preppie, on the other hand, gracefulness is less a gift than a standard,
something to measure up to, a performance. The delight of the thing comes from
the knowledge that it’s all contrived, that the effect of effortlessness
requires a good deal of strain, that negligence requires attention, that
indifference requires concentration, that simplicity and naturalness require
affectation. The most delicious “in” joke of Preppiedom is the anxiety everyone
feels about being carefree.
Aldrich’s
attitude toward preppy culture is ambivalent. At times the article parodies the
anxieties of preppies, yet Aldrich also seems to exalt their modesty and
discretion. Although preppies may be the target of his satirical tone, he finds
redeeming qualities in them which he suggests may be growing rare.
Ultimately
his article is less the lampooning of a social class and more the taxonomy of
an odd breed. Less than two years later, this taxonomy would reappear as a New
York Times best-selling handbook.
The
article is long and sometimes tedious, and so we’ve opted to present it in an
excerpted format. This also presumably reduces our culpability in any copyright
infringement accusation.
In
addition to “Preppies,” Aldrich uses the terms Archies (from the Archie comic
books) to denote the suburban middle class, and City Kids for the urban working
class. — ZACHARY DELUCA & CC
* * *
“Preppie”
is a catchall epithet to take the pace of words too worn or elaborate for
everyday use, words such as privileged, ruling class, aristocrat, society
woman, gentleman, and the rich. Ideological struggle is too shaming to talk
about these days. Lifestyle rivalry is the new engine of history. In this sort
of society, Preppies pass for an upper class.
There are
two sorts of Preppies, the self-made and the hereditary. Hereditary Preppies
will have a Preppie parent or two — a parent, that is, who went to a prep
school. But the purest of the type will go to the same prep school as his
parent.
Contrary
to widespread belief, most students at prep schools are not hereditary
Preppies.
Historically,
of course, most Preppies have been privileged WASPs. The Preppie ideal is
therefore indelibly stamped with a certain privileged WASPishness.
WASPishness
may be defined as a particular squeamishness. WASPs are readily revolted by the
following facts of life: physical flabbiness, homosexuality, enthusiasm,
Archies, cynicism, fearfulness, salesmanship, flamboyance, money,
self-assertion.
More
positively, WASPishness may be defined as a certain bravery in the face of
other facts of life: disease, demonstrative women, impotent men, accident,
disgrace, and physical hardship (especially when suffered, or inflicted, in the
name of a civic virtue such as patriotism).
* * *
Whether
or not they are in fact rich, all true Preppies act as if they were. But there
are many ways of acting rich. Misers act rich by acting as if they were poor.
Spendthrifts act rich by openly impoverishing themselves. Technicians of wealth
merely get rich, by knowing how to use money. All these ways of being rich
manifest a belief that riches are important. The Preppie way of being rich is
to act as if riches had no importance at all.
Preppies
are not abnormally obtuse. They know that people are generally valued according
to the work they do, and that the work they do is generally valued according to
the money that’s paid for it. Nevertheless, all prep schools and many Preppie
parents got to some lengths to cultivate in their charges an unfeigned
indifference to money. The indifference will be either high-minded or careless.
High-minded indifference leads to ambitions of public service, in which case
the Preppie may easily attain a place in the top 5 percent income bracket.
Careless indifference leads to careers in arts, letters, and leisure, in which
case the Preppie’s indifference will soon be tested by poverty. Usually he
flunks the test, and ends up putting a very un-Preppie-like value on money.
Inherited
wealth is widely believed to offer the best base from which to cultivate
high-mindedness or carelessness with respect to money. This is correct, as a
general rule. It is a great mistake to conclude, however, that all high-minded
and careless Preppies are hypocrites enjoying the benefits of their trust funds
while also enjoying feelings of warm superiority over their rivals, the
striving City Kids or the anxious Archies.
In the
first place, while wealth does not confer Preppieness, prep schools do, and
attendance at a prep school is expensive, around $5,000 a year.
Like all
ideals, the Preppie ideal represents a collective yearning; with respect to
money, it is a yearning for a triumph — of class over income, of grace over
works, of being over doing. The City Kid, of course, represents a yearning for
more worldly triumphs. Archies worry too much to yearn for anything but peace.
* * *
Preppie
clothing is so uniform that it betrays a group consciousness as distinct as
that of investment bankers or arriviste Arabs. A list of articles in the
Preppie wardrobe would be tedious, but the following are some of the more
familiar items: LL Bean boots, Top-Sider moccasins, tasseled loafers; pure wool
socks, black silk socks, no socks; baggy chinos, baggy brick-red or lime or
yellow or pink or Pulitzer trousers, baggy Brooks Brothers trousers, baggy
boxer underpants; shirts of blue, pink, yellow, or striped Oxford, sometimes
buttoned down, some made for a collar pin, usually from Brooks or J. Press or
The [name of town or college] Shop; jackets of tweed, corduroy, poplin,
seersucker with padless shoulders, a loose fit around the waist, and (if tweed)
a muddy pattern; a shapeless muddy-patterned tweed overcoat, its collar
lopsidedly rolled up under one ear, a shapeless beige raincoat bleached by
years of use and irresistant to rain; no hat, a cross country ski cap, a very
old snap-brimmed felt hat, a very old tennis hat.
Thus the
male preppie wardrobe.
It is
true that Preppie women are alone in all the world in their devotion to Fair
Isle sweaters, while Preppie men are alone only in their devotion to a
particular ensemble. Nevertheless, the most remarkable aspect of Preppie attire
is that males and females, lacking any difference in size or form, could help
themselves to each other’s clothes without any embarrassment whatsoever.
There are
peculiarities of fit in the Preppie costume. On Brooks Brothers trousers, for
example, the crotch invariably floats midway between the Preppie crotch and the
Preppie kneecaps. Alternatively, the trouser crotch is where it belongs, near
the Preppie crotch; but in that event, the trouser cuff will float midway
between the Preppie instep and the Preppie calf. The reason for this
characteristic float is that at fittings, Preppies always repel too intimate a
calculation of the inseam length of their trousers.
Preppies
are made squeamish by other aspects and articles of clothing, too. They never
wear anything made of acrylic fibers, or double knit. They always eschew the
display of any totemic figure on their sport shirts, unless, at the farthest
limit of the permissible, it’s their own country club’s totem. An alligator
worn on the breast of an otherwise Preppie-looking fellow indicates either an
incomplete emergence from Archieness or an imminent collapse into it.
Like
bankers and Arabs, Preppies occasionally enjoy stepping out of sartorial type.
When they do, it is with exquisite prudence and calculation. With regard to
clothing, as with most human performances, the Preppie is a connoisseur of
marginal differences. The most vital difference is the one he guards between
himself and the Archies. Yet Archies, unlike the vaguely Italianate City Kids,
have no distinctive uniform for Preppies to avoid. Fortunately, however, there
are certain costumes they would never wear. An Archie would never dress like a
farmworker or a lobsterman, for example, or a City of Londonman either in the
city or enjoying a four-day weekend. Thus, Preppie deviations always run in
vaguely aristocratic directions, toward nature’s noblemen or what he thinks of
as Europe’s. Preppie women are even more cautious in their deviations, always
wearing a modest pin or earrings with their jeans.
The
Preppie’s connoisseurship is most rigorously tested when he is still in prep
school or college, for then he must decided what to wear as a Preppie among
other Preppies. For this audience, most Preppies select margins of
differentness so subtle as to be invisible to anyone else. This intense rivalry
of small differences is experienced by almost all real Preppies as oppressive;
only would-be Preppies or late converts engage in it happily. Yet the
oppressiveness has one great virtue; it provides the necessary circumstances
against which a few Preppies may act out thrilling dramas of costume rebellion.
And the fact that most prep schools still enforce dress codes, albeit less
rigorously than do banks or construction firms, contributes a whiff of real
peril to the fun.
With
respect to most other aspects of appearance — straightness of teeth, of nose,
healthy complexion, and so on — Preppies are no longer distinguished, if they
ever were. A more general prosperity has put these good things in the grasp of
all but the poor. But with respect to the appearance of youthfulness, Preppies
still cling to an advantage over their life-style (or, if you will, class)
rivals. So important to Preppies is the obligation to seem young that two of
the most egregious qualities of their costume are contrived to that end. One is
the amazing stability of the Preppie style, which, having changed scarcely at
all in forty years, enables Preppies to wear in middle and old age the
inimitable clothing of their youth. The second is the odd Preppie palette.
Preppies of all ages and both sexes demonstrate an unwavering taste for
luminescent pastels and hard primary colors, a taste evidently designed to
evoke the infantile gaiety of the nursery or the youthful certainties of
Playskool.
* * *
Preppies
are not the only class of people in society to acknowledge the value of charm,
but they’re the only ones to cultivate it. Preppies work on their charm the way
City Kids work on their wits, and the way Archies work on their golf game.
Preppies
tend to think of their charms as virtues. Perhaps they are some of them. It is
virtuous, for example, to put people at their ease, which is what many of the
Preppie charms aim to do. Still, Preppies think of their charms as “working” or
“not working,” and this is not the way people ordinarily think of virtues such
as goodness or courage. The Preppie charms, then, include discretion, modesty,
self-restraint, deference, gratitude and grace. All grow out of the principal
characteristics of prep-school life, its harshness, competitiveness, and
unending publicity, its hierarchies of winners and losers, and its quality of
constant performance.
Discretion.
In social situations, Preppies seem to be guided less by their intelligence
than City Kids are, and less by convention than Archies. They move
instinctively, and the instinct most alive in them is discretion.
Discretion
is alertness. The Preppie is exquisitely alert to the most delicate
reverberations of his own impact on a social situation, and of everyone else’s.
Discretion is a sense of occasion. Preppies mete out their feelings and
thoughts and gestures in discreet performances, chosen and shaped for their
appropriateness like a daub on a pointillist’s brush.
Modesty.
The essence of Preppie charm, to those who aren’t wholly contemptuous of it, is
that it is disarming. It’s meant to be. Preppies know that they are seen as
privileged and on that account are envied. Much Preppie charm, especially
modesty, is calculated to disarm envy.
Modesty
is the economy of egotism. Its first rule is to honor the claims of others to a
share of the audience’s time, if only so that they may make fools of
themselves. Its second rule is to be aware that in the perspective of history
(with which the Preppie fancies himself on special terms), all feats are soon
undone, surpassed, or shown to have had evil consequences. Thus Preppie modesty
downplays all accomplishments, not just one’s own.
Deference.
Deference is the ghost of chivalry that hides in every Preppie’s closet. It is
learned at boarding school through the experience of unremitting subordination
— to the headmaster, to the faculty, and to boys and girls older and better
than you.
Deference,
moreover, is not only an expression of eager subordination; it also expresses a
faith that society may really and truly be composed of hierarchies of
excellence, that America is a landscape of natural pyramids. Thus, a son who
shows deference to his father, or a student to his teachers, or an associate to
his senior partners, or an adviser to the President of the United States, is
not only granting to paternity, knowledge, seniority, or high office the
authority that in the Preppie view they deserve; he is also reinforcing his
belief that paternity, knowledge, seniority, and high office still continue as
the chief organizing principles of society. Therefore, deference is a Preppie
charm in the quite literal sense that it makes the world seem a place in which
Preppies get what they deserve, and where those who get more than others do
deserve deference as well.
Gratitude.
The wealth of the Preppie is measured in “contacts,” not in bank accounts. Some
of them come to believe that contacts count for everything in the world, in
which case gratitude is the essential element in their Preppie modesty. None of
them ever believes, or is ever allowed to believe, that “he made it on his
own.” Archies and City Kids can be self-made men; Preppies can only be
grateful.
Grace. Of
all the Preppie charms, grace is the hardest to achieve. Grace is what
separates princes from frogs and hobgoblins (or Preppies from Archies and City
Kids). Grace is a sign of legitimacy; Grace is the ultimate favor in the gift
of the Great Contact on High.
With the
charm of grace, the Preppie enters the very heaven of social ideals. All his
other charms are distinctive and difficult and rare. But gracefulness in word
and deed, sprezzatura, désinvolture, nonchalance, a manner that embraces
carelessness, negligence and arrogance, a manner that’s languid and easy, proud
and indifferent, reckless and uncalculating —
such a charm lifts the Preppie from time-bound figment of social
imagination to myth. Which naturally enough, is where he’d like to be.
With the
charm of grace, the Preppie is the envy of the world, a reminder of the strange
workings of Fortune, which is unmoved by solicitations, prayers, merit,
intelligence, violence, or any of the other things that people usually have to
rely on to get ahead in the world. To Archies and City Kids, the graceful
Preppie is a rebuke to effort, a living portent of the fundamental injustice of
the universe.
For the
Preppie, on the other hand, gracefulness is less a gift than a standard,
something to measure up to, a performance. The delight of the thing comes from
the knowledge that it’s all contrived, that the effect of effortlessness
requires a good deal of strain, that negligence requires attention, that
indifference requires concentration, that simplicity and naturalness require
affectation. The most delicious “in” joke of Preppiedom is the anxiety everyone
feels about being carefree.
* * *
Life
after prep school is for most Preppies a lengthy process of learning the dead
spots in the various auditoriums where they’re called upon to perform. Not only
are whole groups of people — policemen and bureaucrats, for example — unmoved
by their charms, almost eveyrone fails to be charmed at one time or another.
One
explanation for these failures is that Preppies often operate from an
inadequate theory of social life, according to which the division of society
into Preppies, Archies and City Kids corresponds to older triparite divisions
such as aristocrats, bourgeois, and commoners, or capitalists, managers, and
proletarians, and these divisions are fixed. In this scheme of things charm is
a quality of manners, and manners are a dramatization of differences in status,
and status is a perfectly intelligible matter of one’s place in the social
structure. Thus everyone has manners and charm, so long as everyone stays in
his place. Moreover, everyone’s place is such that within his own class there
will always be someone above and below him, so that no one will be deprived of
the gratifications of subservience, and the pleasures of mastery. This theory,
if believe in and acted upon, causes the whole auditorium to go dead.
A more
adequate theory for the effective exercise of Preppie charm is one that sees
society in the image of a cruise ship. The ship has a number of classes of
accommodation, which have no congruence with the Preppie, City Kid and Archie
classes. The theory recognizes, moreover, that a substantial minority of the
passengers do not feel comfortable in their assigned accommodations.
Accordingly, for as long as the cruise continues, there’s a good deal of
running around as the people push, work and bribe their way into cabins where
they think they belong.
How the
Preppie acts on the basis of this theory depends on whether he decides to stay
in his cabin or join the others running around all over the ship. Many Preppies
never emerge from their suites, but pass away the time giving parties. These
deploy their charms on each other, and are consequently soon bored. Other
Preppies, remembering their prep school competitiveness, “get out there and
fight,” “join in,” and soon begin running around the ship looking for better
quarters of their own. These Preppies learn quickly to think of their charms
not as semaphore of a status already arrived at, but as tools with which to
acquire status, or to defend it once acquired.
So far
the theories assume an intelligible society. What happens when it ceases to be
intelligible? Now everyone is running around looking for better quarters. Now
the scene has none of the qualities of a contest, with formal boundaries,
agreed-upon rules, and recognizable trophies. Now everyone keeps score in his
own way, counting two units of happiness as the equivalent of one million
dollars, or good health as the equivalent of a son in medical school, or a
house in the country as the equivalent of a satisfying job. Now the great group
competitions break up, too, as Preppies and City Kids find the game too
complicated to play anymore. As this happens, the conflict becomes
unmanageable, at once limitless and instantaneous, like an endless series of
random murders in the corridors. What good is Preppie charm in a society like
that?
The
answer is that Preppie charm must then become frankly a branch of situational
theater, with this difference: Theatrical workers never aim to deceive, only to
create an illusion that everyone knows to be an illusion. Charm-workers do aim
to deceive. Their lives depend on it. They create order and status by creating
an audience. In the new world of the free-for-all, Preppies many have a better
chance even than City Kids, for they’re nothing if not trained for
performances.
* * *
There
were once two readily distinguishable sets of Preppie ideals.
One set
was preached and occasionally practiced at those schools that had been
established on the model of the English public schools. They were known as the
“St. Grotlesex” schools. The chief characteristic of St. Grotlesex idealism was that it was
self-consciously aristocratic. The good life was a life of service and of
heroism, preferably in war but if necessary in one of its moral equivalents.
The text adumbrating these ideals were to be found in the more martial passages
of the Old Testament, especially the story of David before he became king, and
in Malory and Tennyson. an aristocratic kind of egalitarianism was preached, as
when people feel about each other, “Why, you’re as good as I am.” And this
style affected to despise the acquisitive life in all its forms, except the
collection of beautiful objects.
The
second set of ideals — preached and occasionally practiced at schools such as
Exeter, Choate, Hotchkiss and Milton — was more bourgeois than aristocratic,
more Congregational or Unitarian than Episcopal, more New England than old,
more industrial Victorian than sentimental Victorian. It seldom preached the
doctrine of service, except in the utilitarian sense that he helps all who
helps himself, and instead of the heroism of battle, it emphasized the heroism
of hard work. Self-consciously democratic, it encouraged the sort of
egalitarianism that says, “I’m as good as you are.” Though these schools were
as scholastic in tone as the St. Grotlesex ones were athletic, they produced as
few intellectuals and perhaps even fewer artists. The acquisitive spirit was
held, if not in honor, then certainly in respect.
In the
past 10 or 15 years [1964-1969], under the influence of coeducation, the
commingling of students of different backgrounds, and the attrition of the
older teachers and headmasters, there has been a certain convergence of the two
sets of idealism. And with the convergence it has become difficult, as it never
was a generation or two ago, to tell what ideals, if any, are inculcated at
prep schools. Among the students, there is a certain reaction against the
relentless competitiveness of Preppie life, in the name of cooperation. And out
of this reaction, some prep schools have tried to create an odd set of ideals
compounded of Christian, Maoist and Rogerian elements that many of the students
seem to find affecting, if not yet soothing.
Just
discernible in this new Preppie idealism is a wish, barely disguised as a fear,
that the era of economic growth may really be finished, and that a New Dark Age
may be upon us. In that event, the prep schools might at last find their
historic mission and in the fullness of time redeem the uselessness of their
past. For in a world of rapidly diminishing resources, the prep schools —
compact, highly organized, egalitarian societies that they might be — could
finally become the models of the way we must all learn to live.
Aldrich
photo by Adrian Kinloch.

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