“When Greek Meets Greek” and an Invitation to NPC Badge Day

“There are no other Pi Phis at Wellesley but I have met a number of Delta Gammas, Kappa Gammas, Thetas, and one Alpha Phi. When Greek meets Greek in a strange college that has no national fraternities the thought of the individual fraternity for the moment vanishes and the little pin, whatever it may be, serves as an introduction, and the fraternity tie includes all,” wrote one fraternity woman to another in the fall of 1899. 

In 1997, the National Panhellenic Conference, the umbrella organization for 26 women’s fraternities/sororities, established International Badge Day. This year it will take place on Monday, March 3. It is a day set aside a day for women throughout the world to wear their sorority badges or Greek letters in a celebration of sisterhood. This year’s theme is: “Wear Your Letters on Your Heart.” 

An event has been set up on facebook. NPC women can check in and let their intentions be known: https://www.facebook.com/events/1387333368192776/

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© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2014. All Rights Reserved.

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Happy Founders’ Day @BettieLocke and Kappa Alpha Theta!

Today marks Kappa Alpha Theta’s 144th birthday. Whenever I see a tweet from @BettieLocke I wonder how the Thetas managed to make a 164-year-old woman so tech savvy. Seriously though, I have great admiration for Bettie Locke. I’ve included this selection from my dissertation. I think it shows how the early women’s fraternity chapters were founded. There were no rules and guidelines in those post-Civil War years. The women did what needed to be done to grow their organizations. My best wishes to Thetas the world over on their Founders’ Day.

In 1867, 17-year-old Bettie McReynolds Locke [Hamilton] was the first female to enroll in Indiana Asbury College (now DePauw University) in Greencastle, Indiana.  Although the first decision to allow women to attend Asbury was made in 1860, it was rescinded several times with debate following each decision.  

The daughter of Dr. John Wesley Locke, a mathematics professor, she was a formidable student.  During her sophomore year, Locke received an invitation to wear a Phi Gamma Delta badge.  The badge did not come with a dating arrangement as later tradition would have it, nor did it come with the benefits given to men who were initiated into the fraternity.  When Locke declined the badge because it did not come with full membership rights and responsibilities, the Phi Gamma Delta chapter substituted a silver cake basket, inscribed with the Greek letters “Phi Gamma Delta.”  With encouragement and prodding from her father, a Beta Theta Pi alumnus, and her brother William, a Phi Gamma Delta, Locke began plans to start her own fraternity.  She and Alice Allen, another female in the first coeducational Asbury class, studied Greek, parliamentary law and heraldry with an eye towards founding a fraternity for women (Wilson, 1956).

On January 27, 1870, Locke stood before a mirror and repeated the words of the Kappa Alpha Theta initiation vow she had written.  She then initiated Alice Olive Allen [Brant], Bettie Tipton [Lindsey], and Hannah Fitch [Shaw].  Five weeks later, Mary Stevenson, a freshman, joined the group.  Badges larger than the current Kappa Alpha Theta badges were painstakingly designed by the founders and made by Fred Newman, a New York jeweler.  Contrary to popular belief the badge was not patterned after a kite. The original badge was intended to be “something near enough to the Phi Gamma Delta badge to suit Betty Locke and yet slenderized to give it individually” (Wilson, 1956, p. 5).  The badges were first worn to chapel services by the members of Kappa Alpha Theta on March 14, 1870 (Shaw, 1918).

The constitution and by-laws written by the group reflected the desire of its founders “to afford an opportunity for improvement in composition, elocution, and debate” and the by-laws provide for “literary exercises” to consist of “dialogues, debates, declamations, essays, orations, select readings” and for a “public performance at such a time and in such a place and manner as the society may deem proper.” (Mecklin, 1918, p. 150)

Years later, an Alpha chapter member, Edna Rising (1920), wrote of visiting Allen, in whose home two of the Theta founders lived.  Allen related that some male students did not want the females to enter any student activity and daubed mud on chapel seats, hung hoop skirts over the lights, and put silly signs up on campus.

Kappa Alpha Theta’s extension was quick.  Locke’s father had a friend who was a trustee at Indiana University in Bloomington.  The friend had a daughter, Minnie Hannamon, who was college age.  In April, a letter was written to Hannamon, and Locke visited Bloomington in early May.  On May 18, 1870, Locke installed Kappa Alpha Theta at Indiana University with the initiation of the three charter members, Hannamon, Lizzie Hunter and Lizzie Harbinson (Wilson, 1956).  It was evidence of the policy outlined in the original constitution giving the mother chapter at Indiana Asbury University the power to establish other collegiate chapters (“Some history,” 1920). 

The next three chapters were short-lived.  In December of 1870, a chapter was established at Cincinnati Wesleyan University, an experiment that only lasted six months.[1]  A chapter at Millersburg College, a women’s college in Kentucky lasted from April 13, 1871, through January 22, 1872, and one at Moore’s Hill College in Indiana lasted five years.  According to Wilson (1956) Moore’s Hill College was the first Theta chapter to feel the pressure of faculty opposition as well as a limited number of women at the institution.  In November of 1879, the corresponding secretary of the Alpha chapter read a letter from Fitch regarding the chapter at Moore’s Hill.  Fitch replied that she thought the Moore’s Hill chapter records were destroyed when the boarding house in which they were kept burned down (“Side-lights,” 1918).

Northwestern Christian College, today known as Butler University, became home to the Indiana Delta chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta on February 27, 1874.  When Kappa Alpha Theta changed the naming system of chapters, it became the Gamma chapter.  Two members of the chapter at Indiana University, Teresa Luzadder Gregory and Laura Henly, assisted in the formation of the chapter.  The chapter was inactive from February 25, 1886 through November 3, 1906 (Wilson, 1956).

The Epsilon chapter at Wooster College was known as Ohio Alpha when it was chartered on May 12, 1875.  The chapter ceased to exist in 1913 when the college administration ordered all the fraternities to close (Dodge, 1930).

The second national convention was held in Indianapolis on May 14, 1875, with delegates from four chapters in attendance (“Some history,” 1920).  Due to the efforts of several University of Indiana chapter members a chapter was founded on June 8, 1875, at Illinois Wesleyan College in Bloomington.  It was known as Illinois Alpha.  Twenty years later, when the determination was made that there were not enough fraternity-minded students to continue at Illinois Wesleyan, the charter was transferred to the chapter at the University of Illinois and the chapter became known as the Delta chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta. 

Extension took a turn to the east when the Pennsylvania Alpha chapter at Allegheny College was formed in 1876.  One of the Alpha chapter members had an uncle on the faculty at Allegheny College.  He provided the names of four Allegheny College students and Flora Tingley, the Alpha member, invited one of these women to Greencastle.  On her visit to Greencastle, Augusta Densmore was initiated into the Alpha chapter.  She initiated the three others when she returned to Meadville.  All but one were seniors and the chapter disbanded the next year.  Four years later, in 1881, it was reinstalled as Mu chapter (Wilson, 1956).

The four Kappa Alpha Theta Founders

The four Kappa Alpha Theta Founders

[1] The chapter was revived as the Alpha Tau chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta in 1913 (Wilson, 1956).

From Coeducation and the History of Women’s Fraternities 1867-1902, Frances DeSimone Becque, Dissertation, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, 2002.

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2014. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Butler University, DePauw University, Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, Indiana University, Kappa Alpha Theta | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Happy Founders’ Day @BettieLocke and Kappa Alpha Theta!

Friends For Life, For Fun, and For Support

Today’s post is about things I’ve seen posted on the internet in the last 24 hours. The first is from an almost year-old news story which appeared in the Lansing State Journal last February. A friend posted it to her facebook page yesterday and it caught my eye.

L. Margaret Groves and Dorothy Kennedy met in 1947 and they were friends for more than six decades. The women were charter members of the Delta Tau Omega chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha. It was Michigan’s second graduate chapter of the sorority. When the Delta Zeta chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha was founded at Michigan State University in 1954, Groves served as chapter adviser. Last year, the Delta Tau Omega Chapter established the “Keepers of the Dream Scholarship” in their honor.

When the article was written, Kennedy was 104 and Groves was 91. Kennedy, a graduate of Wilberforce University, had been employed by the Lansing Parks and Recreation Department. Groves, a Michigan State University alumna was a longtime educator in the Lansing school district. Kennedy died on November 21, 2013 at the age of 105. 

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The charter members of the Delta Tau Omega chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha. Dorothy Kennedy is on the far right in the second row and L. Margaret Groves is on the far right in the front row.

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The second thing that caught my eye was a picture which appeared in the Key of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mary Loy Tatum, Past Grand President of Pi Beta Phi, is pictured with her Kappa Kappa Gamma friend Julie Sherman Morgan. When their husbands decided to buy a sailboat, the Pi Phi and the Kappa were ready with a name for it. The sailboat is called the “Monmouth Duo.” Both organizations were founded at Monmouth College in Illinois.

ghkk

ghkk

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The third item has been in my twitter feed several times. And my heart hurts every time it appears. Many fraternities and sororities hold training and leadership sessions in early January. A road trip to one of these meetings ended in tragedy for one chapter.

Five young men, members of the Northeastern Illinois University chapter of Omega Delta Phi Fraternity, Inc., were travelling from Illinois to the conference in Tucson, Arizona. They never made it to the conference. They were involved in a fatal accident near Amarillo, Texas. Victor Maldonado, 18, of Chicago, and David Roman, 23, of Mundelein, died.The three other members in the vehicle survived the crash.

The chapter established a fundraising page to help the families with expenses. “These two stand up young men were on their way to a conference in Tucson, AZ. Today we are asking for your help as their families go through this difficult moment in their lives,” read the organization’s home page. For information on the fund, see http://davidvictorfund.com/. 

My thoughts and prayers are with these men and their families.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com.

 

Posted in Alpha Kappa Alpha, Fraternity History, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Omega Delta Phi, Pi Beta Phi, The Key of Kappa Kappa Gamma | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Friends For Life, For Fun, and For Support

Remembering a Theta and a Pi Phi, Their Lives Cut Short, Both Trying to Help Afghan Women and Children

Within the last ten months, two young American women were killed in Afghanistan. Both were trying to help make Afghanistan a better place for women and children. Anne Smedinghoff, an initiate of the Kappa Alpha Theta chapter at Johns Hopkins University, was killed in April 6, 2013 by a suicide car bomber. Pi Beta Phi member Lexie Kamerman was killed on January 18, 2014 in a Taliban attack on a popular Lebanese restaurant.

Smedinghoff joined the U.S. Foreign Service after graduating from Hopkins. She was first assigned to Venezuela and she volunteered for the Afganistan assignment. She was delivering textbooks to school children when she was killed. The Taliban took responsibility for the bombing. She was 25 years old and grew up in River Forest, Illinois, in suburban Chicago.

Anne

Anne Smedinghoff

Kamerman was 27-years-old. She, too, was from Chicago. She was a 2008 graduate of Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, and she earned a Master’s degree from the University of Arizona. In June, 2013, she began working in Afghanistan. She was serving as a student development specialist at the American University of Afghanistan. Her goal was to help women take their place in Afghan society.

Lexie Kamerman

Lexie Kamerman

The Lexie L. Kamerman Scholarship Fund has been established at Knox College (http://ow.ly/sO7IF). The Anne Smedinghoff Memorial Fund has been established at Johns Hopkins University to help studentsin need who wish to study abroad (http://krieger.jhu.edu/giving).

My heartfelt condolences to the families and friends of these two wonderful, bright, talented young women. I am so very sorry for your loss.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2014.

Posted in Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins University, Kappa Alpha Theta, Knox College, Pi Beta Phi | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Remembering a Theta and a Pi Phi, Their Lives Cut Short, Both Trying to Help Afghan Women and Children

“The Small Events of Today May Be the Great Things of Tomorrow” – The Corkhill Sisters and P.E.O.

P.E.O., a “philanthropic organization where women celebrate the advancement of women; educate women though scholarships, grants, awards, loans and stewardship of Cottey College; and motivate women to achieve their highest aspirations” was founded as a collegiate organization on January 21, 1869. The seven founders – Franc Roads [Elliott], Hattie Briggs [Bousquet], Mary Allen [Stafford], Alice Coffin, Ella Stewart, Alice Bird [Babb] and Suela Pearson [Penfield] – were students at Iowa Wesleyan College, in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, one of the oldest institutions of higher education west of the Mississippi River.

A little more than a year earlier, in April 1867, Libbie Brook, a student at Monmouth College about 50 miles from Mount Pleasant, across the Mississippi in Warren County, Illinois, helped create I.C. Sorosis, later known by its Greek motto, Pi Beta Phi. Brook convinced her parents that, due to an eye problem, she needed to attend a school where she didn’t know anyone so she could work unhindered by friends and activities. She settled on Iowa Wesleyan College, where it was her intention to start another chapter of her fraternity. On December 21, 1868, her efforts paid off and Pi Beta Phi’s second chapter was established. Not all of the seven P.E.O. founders were asked to join Libbie Brook’s new group, so they created an organization of their own.

Lulu Corkhill was not one of the seven founders of P.E.O., but she may as well have been. She grew up in Mount Pleasant, the daughter of a Methodist minister. She was initiated in March 1869, several weeks after P.E.O. was founded. She was 14 at the time.

She said of those first meetings in Mount Pleasant, “Everything was of such vast importance, everything was so secret. When and where we held our meetings were of as much secrecy as was our oath. And for revealing an officer’s name – that would have been an offense worthy of expulsion. As I look back I can but smile as I recall how careful we were to go down side streets and double on our tracks, and separate ourselves into groups of one as we neared the place of meeting, lest any idle onlooker should detect more than one girl going into a house on the same afternoon and should guess that the P.E.O.s were having a meeting.”

In 1882, a P.E.O. convention, the second of that year, was held in the Methodist parsonage of Dr. Thomas E. Corkhill, in Bloomfield, Iowa. His daughter, Lulu, was convention hostess. She later reflected on that meeting, “As I have tried to recall early days, I have come to realize as never before, how really important our every day life is, and how much it means to those who come after us. We who were early P.E.O.s lived those days and did not think them of enough importance to write them down, and did not try to remember events, and how eagerly those records are sought today. Thus the small events of today may be the great things of tomorrow.”

As a P.E.O. and as Pi Beta Phi’s Historian, I am well aware of the early rivalry between the two groups. In fact, there is a section of Pi Phi’s centennial history titled “Rivalry Between P.E.O. and I.C. Sorosis at Mount Pleasant.” According to the report, some of it taken from the Story of P.E.O. written by Winona Evans Reeves, the two groups were for years “mortal foes yet each respected the steel of the other, for the societies were made up of much of the same type of girls. In Iowa Wesleyan they couldn’t even belong to the same literary societies; they had two societies in later years. The two boys’ fraternities (Beta Theta Pi, founded 1868, Phi Delta Theta, founded 1871 and perhaps Delta Tau Delta active 1875-80) had to be very careful in the way they divided their dates and their attentions.”

Knowing of the intense rivalry between the two groups, I was quite surprised to run across a page in a 1914 Arrow of Pi Beta Phi. It was an obituary for Emma Kate Corkhill. Before I read it, I wondered if she was somehow related to Lulu Corkhill Williams. A few paragraphs later, my hunch was confirmed. Lulu, the P.E.O., had a sister who was a Pi Phi. Both were initiates of the chapters at Iowa Wesleyan. Emma Kate graduated in 1889 and 1892; she earned both a Bachelor’s and a Master’s. She taught at her Alma Mater for a year, at Simpson College for seven years, and at Lawrence University for the remainder of her life.

When Emma Kate died in a Chicago hospital on December 13, 1913, her funeral services were in Mount Pleasant. Her Pi Beta Phi sisters “met the family at the station and opened rank, at the church while the funeral cortege passed through both on entering and leaving the church. Warm tears were on many faces for this gifted woman had an especial place in many hearts among those who had known her from her childhood.” It was noted by one of the members of her chapter that Emma Kate’s “place in the faculty of Lawrence, her place in her sister’s (Lulu’s) home, her place in Pi Beta Phi will long remain a vital tribute to her worth as a woman of heart, of intellect and of true spirituality.”

 

P.E.O. members, please note that there are several other posts relating to P.E.O. There’s a P.E.O. category on the right hand side and you can get a link to the other posts by clicking on it. There is also a post about Lulu Corkhill Williams and the Illinois State Chapter of P.E.O. at the top of the page.

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 (c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All rights reserved. 

Posted in Alpha Phi Alpha, Fran Favorite, Iowa Wesleyan College, P.E.O., Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , | Comments Off on “The Small Events of Today May Be the Great Things of Tomorrow” – The Corkhill Sisters and P.E.O.

SAGs, Happy Birthday Robert E. Lee (and W&L), and a New Time Waster or Two!

The 20th Annual Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards took place last night.

Modern Family’s Ty Burrell, Sigma Chi, won the SAG Award for Outstanding performance by a male actor in a comedy series. (My apologies to Mr. Burrell. I made a mistake in this entry when it was first posted.)

Matthew McConaughey, Delta Tau Delta, picked up the Golden Globe last week and is nominated for an Academy Award. Last night he won the SAG Award for Outstanding performance by a male actor in a leading role for his work in Dallas Buyers Club.

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Robert E. Lee was born 207 years ago, on January 19, 1807. In 1749, Augusta Academy opened a little north of Lexington, Virginia. It was a small classical school. In 1776, a momentous year for our country, the school’s trustees changed the name to Liberty Academy. In 1782, the Virginia legislature granted a charter to the school, which by then had moved a little closer to Lexington and changed its name to Liberty Hall Academy.

An endowment from George Washington helped the struggling school get on its feet. The $20,000 of James River Canal stock Washington gave the school in 1796 prompted the trustees to change the school’s name. It became Washington Academy and in 1813, Washington College.

In 1865, General Robert E. Lee accepted the presidency of the college. It was not a decision he took lightly. While he was concerned that he might bring upon the college some negative feelings, he said  “I think it the duty of every citizen in the present condition of the Country, to do all in his power to aid in the restoration of peace and harmony.”

Although Lee served only about five years, until his death in 1870, he had a significant impact on the institution. He added programs, he raised funds for new buildings, and he created an honor system, much like that of his Alma Mater, West Point. He also made an effort to recruit northern students to the school and made it his goal that they be treated well. After Lee’s death, the trustees changed the name of the school to Washington and Lee University. It is the country’s ninth oldest institution of higher education.

Women were first admitted to the law school in 1972, but it was not until 1985 that the undergraduate population included women.

The first fraternity at W&L was Phi Kappa Psi, whose chapter was founded in 1855. Beta Theta Pi’s chapter came along the following year. At least 30 other men’s fraternities have had chapters there at one time or another. The women’s fraternity system began in 1989, when Kappa Alpha Theta, Chi Omega, and Kappa Kappa Gamma chapters were chartered. Pi Beta Phi followed in 1992, Kappa Delta in 1997, and Alpha Delta Pi in 2009.

Washington and Lee University celebrates Founders’ Day on or near Lee’s birthday. This year, the celebration will take place tomorrow, Monday, January 20.

This General Lee finger puppet was under our Christmas tree this year. It was a gift to my husband, the W&L alumnus, from our daughter. She purchased it at the Missouri History Museum.

This General Lee finger puppet was under our Christmas tree. It was a gift to my husband, the W&L grad, from our daughter. She purchased it at the Missouri History Museum.

The real General Lee

The real General  Robert E. Lee

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Here’s a thought which I spent quite a bit of time pondering yesterday. I then asked this question on twitter (@GLOHistory): Anyone beside me wish you could travel back in time and be in the room where your GLO was founded and see and hear the founders? 

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I was in total procrastination mode yesterday and ventured to Pinterest. I suspect the word means “giant time waster” in another language. It’s quite easy to get lost in it all. But I did set up two boards.

http://www.pinterest.com/glohistory/sorority-history/

http://www.pinterest.com/glohistory/fraternity-history/

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2014. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on SAGs, Happy Birthday Robert E. Lee (and W&L), and a New Time Waster or Two!

A Founding, Two ΔΤΔs in the News, and a Question

On January 17, 1847, Saint Anthony Hall also known as the Fraternity of Delta Psi, was founded at Columbia University. Fewer than 20 chapters have been chartered. Currently, about half those are active chapters, according to reports on the internet. The chapter at Yale University, which functions more as a sophomore (three-year society) admitted women in 1969, shortly after Yale did the same. Most of the chapters are now co-educational.

delta phi

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Congratulations to Delta Tau Delta Matthew McConaughey on his Golden Globe win and his Oscar nomination for his role in the Dallas Buyers Club.

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In 2005, Marcus Lutrell was a member of SEAL Team 10. When the team took on a mission in Afganistan, things went horrible wrong and Lutrell was the only survivor out of 20 soldiers. The movie Lone Survivor is based on the mission. Lutrell is a member of the Sam Houston State Univiersity chapter of Delta Tau Delta. He was awarded the Navy Cross and Purple Heart for his service.

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Someone send me this picture of badge molds asking if I knew anything about them. I have not a clue, but I do enjoy this picture. The width of the top middle one is about the size of a quarter, judging from another photo which was also sent to me. 

molds

 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2014. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Columbia University, Delta Psi (St. Anthony Hall), Delta Tau Delta, Fran Favorite, Fraternity History, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, NIC | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on A Founding, Two ΔΤΔs in the News, and a Question

Happy 94th Birthday, Zeta Phi Beta and an Honor for Julia Carson, a Loyal Member

Arizona Cleaver, along with her four friends, Pearl Neal, Myrtle Tyler, Viola Tyler, and Fannie Pettie, are the five pearls of Zeta Phi Beta. They are the organization’s founders. The idea for the organization happened several months earlier when Cleaver was walking with Charles Robert Samuel Taylor, a Phi Beta Sigma at Howard University. Taylor suggested that Cleaver consider starting a sister organization to Phi Beta Sigma.

Although there were already two sororities on the Howard University campus, Cleaver and her four friends were interested and started the process. They sought and were granted approval from university administrators. The five met for the first time as a sanctioned organization on January 16, 1920. They named their organization Zeta Phi Beta. It is the only National Pan-Hellenic Council sorority constitutionally bound to a fraternity; that fraternity is Phi Beta Sigma.

Shortly after Zeta Phi Beta’s debut, the other NPHC sororities founded at Howard University, Delta Sigma Theta and Alpha Kappa Alpha, gave a reception for the Zeta Phi Beta members.

How wonderful it is that on Founders’ Day, Zeta Phi Beta member Julia Carson, Indiana’s first African American and first woman from Indianapolis elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, will  be memorialized with a bronze bust in the Statehouse. The event is part of the State of Indiana’s 23rd Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Indiana Holiday Celebration sponsored by the Indiana Civil Rights Commission and the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Indiana Holiday Commission.

Carson was born Julia May Porter. Her family moved to Indianapolis when she was a child. A 1955 graduate of Crispus Attucks High School, she attended Martin University in Indianapolis and Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.  She joined Zeta Phi Beta as a college student.

From 1976 until 1990, Carson served in the Indiana Senate. She also served six years as Trustee for Center Township. In 1997, she began her tenure in the United States House of Representatives for Indiana’s 7th congressional district. She was serving in that position when she died in 2007.

Julia Carson

Julia Carson

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© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2014. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, Howard University, National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC), Sorority History, Zeta Phi Beta | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Happy 94th Birthday, Zeta Phi Beta and an Honor for Julia Carson, a Loyal Member

Alpha Kappa Alpha Founders’ Day and a Little About the Gamma Kappa Omega and Beta Delta Chapters

Alpha Kappa Alpha, Incorporated, the first Greek-letter organization for African-American women, was founded on January 15, 1908 by nine young female Howard University students. They were led by the vision of Ethel Hedgeman (Lyle); she had spent several months sharing her idea with her friends. During this time, she was dating her future husband, George Lyle, a charter member of the Beta Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha. The other eight founders are Anna Easter Brown, Beulah Burke, Lillie Burke, Marjorie Hill, Margaret Flagg Holmes, Lavinia Norman, Lucy Slowe and Marie Woolfolk Taylor.

The sorority’s badge is an ivy leaf with a green enamel center bordered by pearls and the Greek letters in gold, one at each point on the leaf. The letters Omega and Psi are superimposed in the center of the badge. The pledge pin is a small ivy leaf of green enamel. The colors are pink and green, and the flower is the tea rose.

aka

In my travels I found this cookbook. It’s called Cooking with the Pink and Green AKA Palate Pleasers. It was published in 2006 and it contains the favorite recipes of members, families and friends of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.’s Gamma Kappa Omega chapter. It reminded me of a section of my Master’s thesis on the history of the Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC) fraternity system from 1948-1960; the cookbook’s publication honored a charter member of the chapter, a woman who devoted herself to lifelong service to her community and her sorority. She is but one of the countless women who have lived the purposes and ideals of Alpka Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.

Gamma Kappa Omega was chartered in 1941. The pledge group, the Alkalphas, was organized in 1943. According to the February 9, 1943 Egyptian student newspaper, “four freshmen were chosen as new members of the Al Kappa [sic] group . . . . The initiation of those freshmen into the Alkalpha  group of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority took place in the home of Sara Thelma Gibbs.”

In 1952, the Delta Beta chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. was chartered at SIUC. The 1953 Obelisk yearbook noted that the name of the pledge group was the Ivy Club. In 1954, the chapter boasted nine actives and 20 pledges.

The 1957 Obelisk reported that the 1956-57 academic year was a busy one for the chapter. The sixth annual Kabbachio dance had a theme of “Return to Paradise.” December’s Bemifui Dance raised money for a needy area family. An annual picnic with Alpha Phi Alpha at Giant City ended the academic year. The following year seemed just as busy. Member Lois Krim was featured in an issue of Ebony magazine. The Ivies entertained the active members at a Christmas tea. Religion, etiquette, dating and courtship were subjects of a series of lectures. Arnetta Wallace, Alpha Kappa Alpha’s National President, was the guest speaker at the Panhellenic Workshop in April, 1958.

The cookbook I found is dedicated to Gamma Kappa Omega Chapter charter member, Thelma Gibbs Walker, the woman in whose home the 1943 initiation took place. The dedication noted that it was “fitting that this cookbook be dedicated to Mrs. Walker on the 65th anniversary of Gamma Kappa Omega, a chapter she helped charter. Her quiet demeanor and frankness, compounded with her strength and dignity, compel those who know her to hold her in high esteem.”

After graduating from Lane College in Tennessee, she began a career as a teacher in Carbondale in 1940, when the schools in Carbondale were segregated. Walker and her husband were married on November 23, 1953. They had no children of their own, but they nurtured and guided many young people along the way. In 1975, after 35 years as a teacher, Walker retired. She was the last surviving Gamma Kappa Omega founder. Walker died in 2006. In 2012, her Sorors dedicated a plaque in her memory at the middle school in Carbondale.

Thelma Walker, Charter member of the Gamma Kappa Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sprproty, Inc.

Thelma Gibbs Walker, Charter member of the Gamma Kappa Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sororoty, Inc.

 

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2014. All Rights Reserved.

To read about Eleanor Roosevelt and her affiliation with Alpha Kappa Alpha, please see http://wp.me/p20I1i-A5

Posted in Alpha Kappa Alpha, Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Howard University, National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Alpha Kappa Alpha Founders’ Day and a Little About the Gamma Kappa Omega and Beta Delta Chapters

Dean Wormer’s Favorite Editorial? Phooey!

With a link which included “dean-wormer-s-favorite-editorial.html,” I knew what to expect. The title “Abolish Fraternities” left no room for interpretation. I know smoke was coming out of the ears of those of us who believe in the fraternity system. We believe that when it is done correctly it is one of the best training grounds available to college students. I realize that I am preaching to the choir. Most of you who subscribe to this blog are dedicated believers.

Anti-fraternity sentiment has been around for as long as there have been fraternities. When Monmouth College gave into church pressure and banned the organizations from campus, both Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Kappa Gamma had to close their Alpha chapters, both less than 10 years after they were founded. I have often reflected on how amazing it was that both organizations were able to grow and prosper despite this very threat to their existence.

In stewing about this editorial a thought kept running through my mind that I had just written about something similar, but I couldn’t place it. So I had to bring up the front side of this blog and just start looking through it. Yes, a few weeks ago I wrote about the anti-fraternity sentiment of a century ago. The full post is at http://wp.me/p20I1i-1is. It is as true today as it was 100 years ago.

John L. Kind, Delta Tau Delta, who a century ago was a professor at the University of Wisconsin, told of the anti-fraternity movement in Wisconsin. He wrote, “The fraternities ask for no privileges except the modest one of being allowed to lead healthy, mutually helpful lives. On the other hand, the fraternities, thanks to the zealous labors and sacrifice of their actives and especially their alumni, help solve the difficult problems of housing and feeding hundreds of students, at no expense to the state.”

Kind pondered what the banning of Greek-letter organizations would bring for it was the “most vital, most practical question that can be asked. The fraternity houses exist, and Mr. Anderson himself suggested that they be used to house students. Since they could and would still be used to house students and feed students, why should not the same students who occupy them now continue in residence? If they did what would prevent them from filling vacant place with other young men of their choice? These men would not be initiated into any mysteries, they would not be made members of a Greek-letter fraternity, to be sure, but they would live and associate immediately with each other then as now, and so where would the shaking up in the bag of democracy be, that Mr. Anderson wanted to administer? It would simply mean to the casual observer wiping the Greek letters off the front door. But the real effect would be of much greater importance. The ties that bind a group of young, inexperienced men and women to a responsible, supervising national government would be broken. The feeling of pride in and responsibility to a great, dignified organization of national membership would be lost, all the local disadvantages that our opponents point out would be augmented. It is always better ‘to look before you leap.’”

The fraternity system offers students many opportunities for learning and personal growth. Most of the time, chapters and officers try to do the right thing. Sometimes young adults do stupid things (sometimes older adults, myself included, do stupid things, too). And as humans, we sometimes learn the best lessons when we make mistakes. Fraternities provide a good opportunity for these lessons.  It’s hands-on learning in a hopefully nurturing environment. 

As T.J. Sullivan says, “You are always wearing your letters.” (http://tjsullivan.com/you-are-always-wearing-your-letters/). Greek-letter organizations are easy to identify; it’s almost like wearing a target on one’s back. I remember a conversation with a fraternity chapter president who was lamenting that the guys in the house two doors down could have a party whenever they wanted and do basically whatever they wanted, whenever they wanted because they were just a random group of guys living in a house. Unless laws were broken, and the police were called, there was nothing stopping them from all sorts of mayhem. The fraternity chapter had policies and procedures for all varieties of events and activities and a matrix to follow to keep themselves in good standing with their organization and the university. When the random house of guys two doors down from the fraternity did something stupid, hardly anyone noticed. The same could not be said if the fraternity fell into the same fate.

And as long as students are not forced to join fraternities, why in the world should they be banned? Moreover, there is nothing in this world that is done correctly 100% of the time. Should cars be banned because every day there are deadly accidents happening all over the country? Should we ban airplanes because every now and then, there is a plane crash? Ships occasionally sink. People still drown in bathtubs. Should we ban them, too?

Sensational still sells, and the Bloomberg’s editorial drove in traffic to that site. 

*Dean Vernon Wormer of Animal House fame.

©Fran Becque, fraternityhistory.com, 2014. All Rights Reserved.

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