Thanking You All on Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving 2013. It is a day for giving thanks and I do not want to miss this opportunity to tell you how grateful I am for those of you who read these posts. To all who may read these letters, Greetings!*

Of course, there are a whole host of things for which I am grateful. Most of them have absolutely nothing to do with this blog. Yet, writing these posts has become a big part of my life and one that gives me such joy. Every now and then I hear from someone who reads these posts. It usually makes my day (except for those who say “take me off this list NOW”). One of the picker-uppers came last week about the November 22, 1963 post, “I love these Fran! Little bits of history with a twist of the Greek community woven through…I read them faithfully!” 

Another reader sent me a box of Wilson Heller’s Fraternity Insider newsletters. What a great surprise and an absolute treat! I am slowly savoring them, making notes, and the treasures I’ve discovered will appear in future posts. Reading them is a little like reading a racing form and although I am a fast reader, I read them slowly, almost as if they were written in a different language. I suspect Heller was quite a character, a raconteur. I’ve had to look up several words including “anent,” “eleemosynary,” and “tong.” 

The top pile have been read. The bottom pile is to savor slowly.

The top pile have been read. The bottom pile is to savor slowly.

I am grateful for those who let me know when I’ve made an error. I am grateful for the extra pairs of eyes and the friends who will e-mail me ideas, pictures, and additional information to use in the posts. I appreciate all the encouragement and support that has been given to me. You are all tops in my book. Happy Thanksgiving!!!

* Give yourself an extra point if you recognize this reference to a certain genre of college diplomas. I think that is a line from my husband’s University of Michigan diploma (that one also came with a maize colored ribbon reminiscent of something a state fair baking contest winner would receive).

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

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Happy 125th Birthday Tri Delta!

“I am afraid those two young hearts would have been very much discouraged had they realized at that time what an herculean task it was to start a national fraternity, but fortunately for their peace of mind, and for the future happiness of the hundreds who have already learned to love the name of Delta Delta Delta, the two enthusiastic friends were unaware of the fact that there was something stupendous about the task they had set hands, heads and hearts to accomplish. They were working for a principle, and it never occurred to them that there could be such a thing as failure. Earnestness of purpose, energy and enthusiasm had brought them both success in college, and why should not these same qualities bring assurance of good fortune to the new venture? At all events they had faith in the power of these forces, and with light hearts turned their thoughts to the founding of a new fraternity,” wrote (Sarah) Ida Shaw Martin, years after she, along with Eleanor Dorcas Pond (Mann, M.D.), founded Delta Delta Delta.

The locale was Boston University and it was the evening before Thanksgiving. The date was November 28, 1888. Founders’ Day is celebrated on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving.

Both women graduated first from their respective high school classes. They along, with the two other female seniors, had not joined any of the women’s fraternities then at Boston University – Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Phi, or Gamma Phi Beta. Pond talked to Shaw and they decided to start a society of their own. Pond suggested that they use a triple Greek letter and Shaw chose the Greek letter Delta. Shaw also developed the mottoes and passwords.

Shaw and Pond threw themselves into the details associated with the founding. All was finished by Tuesday of Thanksgiving week, 1888, but the two met again on Wednesday afternoon, before leaving for the holiday. They met in the Philological Library at the top of the college building. Shaw and Pond embraced and said “Tri Delta is founded.”

They were also intent on getting the other two unaffiliated seniors to join their organization. Florence Stewart quickly agreed, but Isabel Breed took a little more convincing due to her highly religious nature. When she was given the job of chaplain, she relented and joined her three friends. Although these two did not take part in the actual formation of Delta Delta Delta as Pond and Shaw had done, the four are considered founders. Soon three juniors pledged allegiance to Delta Delta Delta as well as five sophomores and six freshmen. These women were initiated at the Joy Street home of Emily F. Allen on January 15, 1889.

Ida Shaw Martin, as she was known after her marriage, published and marketed 11 editions of The Sorority Handbook, beginning in 1907. She spent 30 years as a consultant to Greek-letter organizations.

In 1896, Pond graduated from Tufts Medical College She became Mrs. Arthur Mann in July of that year. She then went on to a successful medical career. Although the Manns moved all over the world, she remained a loyal Tri Delta. In 1906, she attended her first convention. It was held in Syracuse, NY. “There facing the encircling square of the banquet tables, she looked into one hundred and seventy-five faces, representatives of a society fifteen hundred strong, and upon request repeated something of the story of the founding of Delta Delta Delta, and perhaps for the first time fully realized how great a momentum the movement had gained to which eighteen years before, in her girlhood days at Boston University, she had been a partner in giving it first impetus. Bright, unaffected, capable, successful, she was a present witness to each delegate of how good a thing it has been for Delta Delta Delta that from the first to the last, from the women on whose golden locks the finger of time has begun its tracery of silver to the newest pledge, all have remained to watch and to work.”

Tri Delta's Alpha Chapter, 1888

Tri Delta’s Alpha Chapter, 1888

Quotes are taken from A Detailed Record of Delta Delta Delta 1888-1907 by Grand Historian Bessie Leach Priddy.

Posted in Boston University, Delta Delta Delta, Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Ida Shaw Martin | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Happy 125th Birthday Tri Delta!

100 Years of Making a Difference – Happy Birthday Phi Sigma Sigma!

Not only does this year mark Phi Sigma Sigma’s Centennial, but it also celebrates the rebirth of its Theta Chapter at the University of Illinois. Chartered in 1923, the chapter counts among its alumnae Tatyana McFadden, Paralympic Gold Medalist, and Irna Phillips, considered the “mother of modern soap opera.” Among the soap operas Phillips created are Guiding Light, As the World Turns, Days of Our Lives and Another World.

In October 2013, nearly 200 women were pledged to Theta Chapter. The rechartering festivities will take place on December 6 and 7, 2013. Best wishes to the Theta Chapter members who will be initiated that weekend during this Centennial year. In the fall, the chapter will move back into its home owned at 902 South Second Street in Champaign.

Bid Day, Theta Chapter, 2013

Bid Day, Theta Chapter, 2013

Phi Sigma Sigma was founded at New York’s Hunter College on November 26, 1913. Its ten founders are Lillian Gordon Alpern, Josephine Ellison Breakstone, Fay Chertkoff, Estelle Melnick Cole, Jeanette Lipka Furst, Ethel Gordon Kraus, Shirley Cohen Laufer, Claire Wunder McArdle, Rose Sher Seidman and Gwen Zaliels Snyder.

The organization’s original name was Phi Sigma Omega, but it was discovered that the name was already in use. Five years later, the Beta Chapter at Tufts University was founded when a friend of one of the founders expressed an interest in the organization. A third chapter was chartered at New York University.

At the 1918 convention in New York City, founder Fay Chertkoff was elected the organization’s first grand archon. A constitution was approved and a Supreme Council was elected. This past summer, Phi Sigma Sigma members from across the country traveled to New York City to attend convention and celebrate 100 years of sisterhood.

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

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Thanksgiving Dinner With a Sorority Flavor

Days after I posted this I recalled that the impetus for this post was an Alpha Sigma Alpha who is credited with creating the green bean casserole. Dorcas Bates Reilly, a member of Drexel University’s Alpha Sigma Alpha chapter, is known as the “Grandmother of the Green Bean Casserole.”

First choose some recipes from these cookbooks/blogs:

Julee Rosso – Silver Palate products/cookbooks (Alpha Phi, Michigan State University)

Ree Drummond – Pioneer Women blog/cookbooks (Pi Beta Phi, University of Southern California)

Katherine Lee – cookbooks (Kappa Alpha Theta, Miami University)

Melissa Donovan d’ArabianTen Dollar Dinners (Alpha Chi Omega, University of Vermont)

Maryana Bollinger Vollstedt – Cookbook author (Chi Omega, Oregon State University)

Erin Summers Chase –  5dollardinners.com (Pi Beta Phi, Texas Christian University)

Jean Wickstrom Liles – Southern Living editor and cookbook author (Delta Zeta, University of Alabama, and Delta Zeta’s 2002 Woman of the Year)

Beverly Barbour Soules – Cookbook author (Alpha Gamma Delta, North Dakota State University)

Alex Guarnaschelli – Iron Chef, (Delta Gamma, Columbia)

And make sure to serve Sister Shuebert’s rolls (Patricia Wood Barnes, Kappa Delta, Troy State University)

End with some candy from Fran’s Chocolates (Fran Watson Bigelow, Pi Beta Phi, University of Washington)

or Hershey’s Chocolate. Francine Irving Neff (1925-2010), former U.S. Treasurer; was the first woman appointed to Hershey’s Food Corp. Board of Directors. (Alpha Delta Pi, University of New Mexico)

And let’s not forget these names from the past:

Clementine Paddleford (1898-1967) – cookbook author. (Alpha Delta Pi, Kansas State University)

Helen Levison Worth (died 2002) – cookbook author. From the 1940s until the 1980s, she directed the Helen Worth Cooking School in New York City, one of the country’s first cooking schools. (Alpha Epsilon Phi, University of Michigan)

Margaret Sawyer – In 1924, she developed a home economics department for General Foods. (Kappa Alpha Theta, University of Illinois)

And remember Betty Crocker! Of course there is no real Betty Crocker, but several sorority women have had a hand in creating and perpetuating the Betty Crocker persona:

Agnes White Tizard (1895-1979) – She was a nutritionist who authored the Betty Crocker Cookbook. (Alpha Delta Pi. University of Illinois)

Mercedes Bates (1916-97) – In 1966, she became General Mill’s first woman corporate officer. She was often referred to as “Betty Crocker” because she was the Vice President in Charge of the Betty Crocker Division. (Delta Zeta, Oregon State University, and Delta Zeta’s 1970 Woman of the Year)

Marjorie Child Husted (1892-1986) – From 1927-47, she as the first radio voice of Betty Crocker in radio programs and she served as Director of the Betty Crocker Homemaking Service. (Kappa Alpha Theta, University of Minnesota)

As for decorating for the holiday, you might want to consult the works of some of these sorority women:

Carolyn Englefield – Veranda magazine. (Delta Gamma, Bowling Green State University)

Jen Lancaster The Tao of Martha: My Year of LIVING; Or, Why I’m Never Getting All That Glitter Off of the Dog (Pi Beta Phi, Indiana University/Purdue University at Fort Wayne)

And the Aromatique scents Patricia Pulliam Upton (Pi Beta Phi, University of Arkansas) can create a wonderful mood.

If you know of any other sorority women might be included on this list, please let me know.

A Sig Ep flanked by his Pi Phi sister and Alpha Phi mother.

A Sig Ep flanked by his Pi Phi sister and Alpha Phi mother (the other two sisters attended women’s colleges).

 (c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Phi, Chi Omega, Delta Zeta, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Kappa Alpha Theta, Notable Fraternity Women, Notable Sorority Women, Pi Beta Phi, Sorority History, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Thanksgiving Dinner With a Sorority Flavor

11/22/1963 in Dallas – The Three Wives, One a ΔΔΔ, and the Judge, a ΔΓ

Friday, November 22, 1963, is one of those hallmark dates. Almost everyone who was alive on that date remembers exactly where they were when they heard of President Kennedy’s death. Today’s collegians might not believe that there wasn’t a 24-hour news cycle then. Television screens projected in black, gray, and white and there were only a handful of stations in each market. The news was only on at scheduled times. There was no internet to scour for the latest news. 

Of the four women (the first female judge in Texas and the wives of the President, Vice-President, and Texas Governor) who played major roles on that fateful day fifty years ago in Dallas, two of them were members of National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) organizations.

The First Lady, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy (Onassis), graduated from Miss Porter’s School in Connecticut and entered Vassar College. She spent her junior year studying at the University of Grenoble and the Sorbonne, in a Smith College study-abroad program. When she returned to the states, she transferred to George Washington University (GWU), entering in 1950 and graduating in 1951. Although I have run across rumors of her belonging to various NPC groups at GWU, I suspect they are just that as I could find no concrete evidence of membership.

The Vice-President’s wife, Claudia Alta “Lady Bird” Taylor Johnson, entered summer school at the University of Alabama after graduating from high school in 1928. Instead of returning to Alabama that fall, she and a friend entered a two-year school, St. Mary’s Episcopal College for Women.  In 1930, she graduated from St. Mary’s and enrolled at the University of Texas. There, she was invited to membership in Alpha Phi, but she broke her pledge because her father was against the idea of her joining a sorority.*

Idanell “Nellie” Brill Connally, wife of John Connally, the Texas Governor, met her husband when they were students at the University of Texas where she was a member of Delta Delta Delta. On that Friday morning in Dallas, the Connallys were seated in the open Lincoln convertible in front of the Kennedys. Years later, she recalled that as the motorcade turned onto Elm Street, she looked at the President and said to him, “Mr. President, you certainly cannot say that Dallas does not love you.” Shots then rang out. Both the President and the Governor were hit by bullets.

The Governor survived his injuries and served until 1969. Both Connallys were honored with the University of Texas Distinguished Alumni Award. The Nellie B. Connally Breast Center at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center is named for her, a breast cancer survivor and a breast cancer awareness advocate. In 2004, two years before her death, she was honored with Delta Delta Delta’s Woman of Achievement Award.

Sarah Tilghman Hughes is perhaps the least known of the four women. She was born in 1896 and was raised in West Baltimore, Maryland. She entered Goucher College, graduating in 1917 with a degree in biology. As a student, she became a member of Delta Gamma’s Psi II chapter and Phi Beta Kappa. For two years, she taught at Salem Academy in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. She then enrolled in the GWU’s School of Law while serving as a D.C. policewoman, working mainly with juveniles. At GWU, she met George Ernest Hughes, a classmate from Palestine, Texas. They married on March 13, 1922. After graduation, they moved to Dallas. He began a private law practice and she joined the firm of Priest, Herndon, and Ledbetter.

When the Alpha Upsilon Chapter of Delta Gamma was installed at Southern Methodist University on October 16, 1926, she was called the chapter’s “Guardian Angel.” According to an account in the January 1927 Anchora, she “proved a delightful toastmistress and made us realize that an eloquent lawyer she must be (she is a full-fledged member of a law firm in Dallas).” That Anchora issue also includes another account of the festivities written by Hughes. In 1950, she served on Delta Gamma’s Constitution and By-laws Revision Committee.

In 1930, she became one of the first women elected to the Texas Legislature; she served three terms. While women had the right to vote, and a few had run for office in Texas, they were not allowed to serve on juries. When Hughes was appointed the first female state district judge in Texas in 1935, she noted that because of the law she would not be able to serve as a juror in her own court. Just prior to her judicial appointment, Hughes and Helen E. Moore introduced a constitutional amendment to give women that right in Texas. It was not passed until 18 years later. In 1936, she was elected in her own right and in 1960, she was reelected to the last of six additional terms.

In 1961, she asked for a federal judgeship. Many thought it was an impossible task given her age, 65, and opposition from the American Bar Association and Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. With some the help, the impossible happened. According to the Handbook of Texas Online, “At her request, the Business and Professional Women’s Club undertook a letter-writing campaign in support of her candidacy and (Senator Ralph W.) Yarborough, Johnson and Speaker of the House Samuel T. Rayburn lobbied effectively on her behalf. When President John F. Kennedy appointed her in October 1961, she became the first woman to serve as federal district judge in Texas.”

Hughes became the first woman to swear in a U.S. President. With President Kennedy having been declared dead, the Vice President was advised that any federal judge could swear him in as President. Johnson asked that Hughes be brought in. She was at home when she took a call from the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas, Harold Barefoot Sanders, Jr. He told her that Johnson wanted her to administer the oath of office before he departed Dallas on Air Force One. She stepped aboard the plane at Love Field, administered the oath, and left. In a 1972 interview in the Baltimore Sun Magazine, she said, “The whole thing took no more than 10 minutes.” As soon as she left the plane, Air Force One headed to D.C.

Years later she said that while she liked to think that Johnson chose her because of their friendship, she realized she may have been the choice because of his feelings towards the other federal judges in Dallas. Hughes died on April 23, 1985. Goucher College will remember her on Monday, November 25, 2013 at 4:30 with a talk by one of her relatives.

Below are two pictures of Judge Hughes.

Hughes_S_42 imgres

* The Johnsons’ daughter, Lynda Bird Johnson Robb is a Zeta Tau Alpha having joined the sorority as a student at the University of Texas. Robb’s daughter, Lucinda Robb, is a Kappa Alpha Theta from Princeton University. Three other granddaughters are Kappa Kappa Gammas: Lynda’s daughters Catherine Robb (UVA) and Jennifer Robb (Duke), and Luci’s daughter Nicole Nugent Covert (Texas).

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, First Ladies, Fran Favorite, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Kappa Alpha Theta, Notable Fraternity Women, Notable Sorority Women, The Anchora of Delta Gamma, University of Texas, Zeta Tau Alpha | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on 11/22/1963 in Dallas – The Three Wives, One a ΔΔΔ, and the Judge, a ΔΓ

For 272 Words on a November Day, 150 Years Ago, We Thank You President Lincoln

On November 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln spoke for about two minutes at the dedication of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The cemetery was the final resting place of the more than 3,500 Union soldiers killed at the Battle of Gettysburg on July 1-3, 1863. The ceremony’s main speaker was Edward Everett, a noted orator and Massachusetts politician. He spoke for two hours. A hymn was sung after Everett’s oration. Then the President rose and spoke 272 words. While Everett’s remarks have been relegated to the background, Lincoln’s simple and humble words have found a place in our Nation’s history.

Lincoln did not attend college, but he has connections to many colleges.  There are statues of him on numerous campuses including in Morris Library at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale and at Illinois College. There are colleges named for him. In 1856, Lincoln spoke at Eureka College on behalf of John Charles Fremont, the Republican candidate for President. 

Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, is the only remaining site of a Lincoln-Douglas debate. The debate took place on October 7, 1858 between the two candidates for the Illinois Senate seat. Lincoln, the Republican candidate, and Stephen Douglas, the Democratic candidate, both made an interesting entrance to the debate. R. Lance Factor, in his book Chapel in the Sky, explained, “A hastily constructed platform blocked the east door and both Lincoln and Douglas had to use a window as a door to reach the debate platform. The obstacle of a window as a door prompted Lincoln’s (possibly apocryphal) remark, ‘Now I can say I have gone through College.'”

The six other debate sites were in Ottawa, Freeport, Jonesboro, Charleston, Quincy, and Alton.  Lincoln lost the election and Douglas won the Senate position. Lincoln, however, was awarded an honorary degree by Knox College in 1860, the same year he was nominated by the Republican party as its candidate for President of the United States.

In 1994, C-Span reenacted the debates and those reenactments can be viewed on the internet. The new Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum* in Springfield, Illinois, which opened in 2005, has an exhibit that is a replica of the debate scene. The debate has been reenacted several times at Knox College, and the picture above is of one of the more recent Lincoln impersonators coming out of the door of Old Main.

Photo by Chi Zhang, Courtesy of Knox College

Photo by Chi Zhang, Courtesy of Knox College

* If you think you visited this museum in the 1960s with your parents as you traversed the country in a station wagon, you’re wrong. This is a fabulous new museum that deserves a visit. You will not be disappointed.  http://www.illinois.gov/alplm/Pages/default.aspx

© Fran Becque  www.fraternityhistory.com   All rights reserved.

 

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November Tornadoes and the Bonds That Bind Us Together

Yesterday, Sunday, November 17, 2013, was an awful one for many communities in America’s heartland. A weather system brimming with high winds and tornadoes leveled communities and changed lives forever. Having grown up on the east coast, I was unfamiliar with tornadoes until we moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan. Then on one fall day, with a sky very blue, I heard a very loud voice, coming from the sky, commanding me to “seek shelter.” Was it the voice of God? I obviously did not get the memo that once a month on a certain day, the city tested the emergency sirens.

Having lived in the midwest pretty much since that first encounter with the emergency siren, I am fairly well-schooled on the protocol of hightailing it to the basement. Yesterday’s trip was a bit odd as it is November. The sky didn’t look too bad when the sirens sounded and the weather radio blared. Social media played a big role yesterday as much of the news about what was going on came via the internet.

My Facebook post around 1 p.m. “Hunkered down in basement. Odd feeling for this time of year. Be safe friends.” was responded to a few minutes later, from a friend in Texas,  “Thinking of you all. We just learned that one of Jim’s fraternity brothers has lost his home in Washington. Stay safe.”

My daughter was on her way back to town from an event for a childhood friend who is getting married in a few weeks. My daughter called to say she was stuck on the highway because there was a tractor-trailer blocking the two lanes of the interstate. She was parked on the highway for two hours. (For news watchers, she had barely missed the New Minden, Illinois tornado. The picture in this post is from her phone. You can see the truck blocking the highway in the second picture.) I was able to find news about why the highway was closed from social media.

1465160_838941946555_1426999492_n

977055_839174206105_72260518_oAlmost immediately, Facebook friends in the Peoria area began posting updates of the Washington, Illinois, tornado. Washington is near several colleges, including Bradley University and Illinois State University. Tweets began to follow, including some of these.

Alpha Gamma Rho ΒΔ ‏@AGRBetaDelta
@AlphaGammaRho Our chapter is planning on helping with tornado relief in Washington, Il. this week. We are taking any donations. Please RT!
 
Sigma Nu Fraternity ‏@SigmaNuHQ
If you know of brothers affected by the storm please let us know so we can lend the helping hand as needed.
 
Delta Gamma ‏@deltagamma
Thinking of those impacted by today’s tornadoes and working to reach our sisters in those areas. #DGsafestorm
 
ISU-Alpha Sigs ‏@ISUAlphaSigs
@ISUAlphaSigs will be hosting a food drive at our house all of this week to help the people affected by the tornado!
 

Facebook posts followed this morning.

Bradley Panhellenic Council · 553 like this 21 minutes ago near Peoria, IL · 
  • Through contributions by members of the Greek system, we raised over $500 for Washington Tornado Relief after Panfrasing last night! I don’t know that I have ever been so proud to be a member of this community.

People helping people is a cornerstone of American society and I know people have already been hard at work trying to help. A fund for the fraternity brother my friend told me about had been set-up by some of his friends within a few hours. His college friends were doing what they could from where they were. My thoughts and prayers are with those affected by this awful storm.

The Lulu Corkhill Fund, a program of the Illinois State Chapter of P.E.O., a Philanthropic, Education Organization, will no doubt help many Illinois residents over the next few weeks and months. 

Most of the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) member groups (and/or their foundations) fund emergency grants to members. Since 1922, the Rose McGill Fund has helped Kappa Kappa Gamma members in need. The same can be said for Kappa Alpha Theta’s Friendship Fund, created in 1926. Two members who remain anonymous, write on the behalf of a sister and secrecy surrounds the Friendship Fund gifts. Pi Beta Phi’s Emma Harper Turner Fund began in 1946 as a way for Pi Phis to help other Pi Phis confidentially and anonymously; more than $100,000 is given annually to Pi Phi collegiate and alumnae members. In 2012, Tri Delta’s Crescent Fund awarded $116,700 to Tri Delta alumnae experiencing unforeseen events. 

Among the programs available for collegians and alumnae members in need are:

Alpha Chi Omega’s Member Assistance Grants
Alpha Delta Pi’s Abigail Davis Emergency Grants (collegiate members) and Clasped Hands Fund Grants  (alumnae)
Alpha Epsilon Phi’s Cheryl Kraff Cooper, M.D, Giraffe Fund
Alpha Gamma Delta’s SIS Grant Program
Alpha Omicron Pi’s Ruby Fund
Alpha Phi’s Forget Me Not Fund
Alpha Sigma Alpha’s Janice Adams Membership Assistance Fund
Alpha Xi Delta’s Heart Fund Grants
Chi Omega’s Sisterhood Fund
Delta Delta Delta’s Crescent Fund
Delta Gamma’s Anchor Grants 
Delta Phi Epsilon’s Harriette Hirsch Sisterhood Fund
Delta Zeta’s Elizabeth Coulter Stephenson Grants (providing financial help for sorority expenses)
Gamma Phi Beta’s Grant-In-Aid
Kappa Alpha Theta’s Friendship Fund
Kappa Delta’s Alumnae Crisis Fund
Kappa Kappa Gamma Rose McGill Fund
Phi Mu’s Leona Hughes Hughes Heart & Hand Fund and the Betty Nell Wilkinson Emergency Scholarship
Pi Beta Phi’s Emma Harper Turner Fund
Sigma Kappa’s Alumnae Heart Fund

My best guess would be that more than $500,000 is given to each year to NPC women in need. I suspect many applications from those affected by these rare November tornadoes will be filled out in the coming days. I’m also fairly certain that contributions to these funds would be very welcomed, too. These funds display a wonderful message of sisters helping sisters.

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

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Happy Founders’ Day Alpha Sigma Alpha With a Thanksgiving Flavor!

Today is Alpha Sigma Alpha’s Founders’ Day. It was founded on November 15, 1901 at the State Female Normal School (now Longwood University) in Farmville, Virginia. It is the youngest of the Farmville Four, the four National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) organizations founded on that campus. The other three organizations are Kappa Delta, Sigma Sigma Sigma, and Zeta Tau Alpha. The Alpha Sigma Alpha founders had been invited to join some of the other sororities on campus, but they wanted to stay together. The five, Virginia Lee Boyd (Noell), Juliette Jefferson Hundley (Gilliam), Calva Hamlet Watson (Wootton), Louise Burks Cox (Carper) and Mary Williamson Hundley, created Alpha Sigma Alpha.

With Thanksgiving just around the corner, it’s a fitting time to highlight one of Alpha Sigma Alpha’s notable members. Dorcas Bates Reilly, a member of Drexel University’s Alpha Sigma Alpha chapter, is known as the “Grandmother of the Green Bean Casserole” and the “Mother of Comfort Food.”

With a B.S. in Home Economics, Reilly worked in the Campbell Soup Company’s Home Economics Department developing recipes. In 1955, she led the team that created the recipe. Reilly said the name was originally Green Bean Bake and somewhere along the way, the name was changed to Green Bean Casserole. Some of the other recipes she helped develop include tomato soup meatloaf, a tuna noodle casserole, and “souperburgers.”

She retired from the Campbell Soup Company in 1988. Reilly presented the original yellowed recipe card to the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Akron, Ohio in 2002. In 2008, Alpha Sigma Alpha honored her with a Recognition of Eminence Award. Reilly was also honored by Drexel University.

ASA


 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

 

Posted in Alpha Sigma Alpha, Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, Longwood University, Notable Sorority Women, Sorority History, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Happy Founders’ Day Alpha Sigma Alpha With a Thanksgiving Flavor!

Veterans Day, Another Day to Recognize Philanthropy, and a Special Gift to the Circle of Sisterhood

Philanthropy has long been a part of National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) organizations. This week began with Veterans Day. President Woodrow Wilson, a member of Phi Kappa Psi, proclaimed November 11, 1919 as the first commemoration of Armistice Day. He said,  “To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country’s service and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nations…” After World War II, the day took on the name “All Veterans Day” to honor those of other conflicts. Somewhere along the way, the day became Veterans Day.

The Association of Fund Raising Executives proclaimed November 15 as National Philanthropy Day®. It is, according to the organization’s website, a day “set aside to recognize and pay tribute to the great contributions that philanthropy—and those people active in the philanthropic community—have made to our lives, our communities and our world.” Sorority women are certainly part of that effort. Just this week, Ginny Carroll, founder of the Circle of Sisterhood, accepted a check from the Clemson University Panhellenic for $22,400 to help support the Circle of Sisterhood’s effort to help young women in poor countries receive an education and help break the circle of poverty. This summer, ground was broken for a school in Senegal. Carroll, along with a group of collegians, traveled to Senegal to help in the effort. The blog posts coming from Senegal during the trip were heartwarming. I encourage you to read them.

Prior to 1910, NPC chapters and alumnae clubs often adopted projects on a local level. Purchasing coal for a family in need, endowing a room in a hospital, supplying milk for a free milk station, and helping to establish a community library are just a few examples of work done by sorority women in the 1800s and early 1900s.

By 1914, a few national philanthropic efforts had begun; these included Alpha Chi Omega’s Star Studio at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, NH, and Pi Beta Phi’s Settlement School in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. In addition, the organizations were creating and funding loan and scholarship programs for their members.

World War I began in 1914 and although America did not enter it until 1917, the NPC magazines of that era tell about the hasty departures of members who were traveling or studying in Europe when the war started. There are also stories from members, including Zeta Tau Alpha’s Grand President, Dr. May Agness Hopkins, who went abroad to be of service in any way they could – as nurses, canteen workers, phone operators, and even at least one surgeon, Kappa Kappa Gamma Dr. Mary Crawford.

The NPC women who stayed on North American soil mobilized and took part in efforts to help those affected by the war. In chapter houses and at alumnae club meetings, members began war work in earnest. They knitted items, collected scrap metal, and purchased Liberty Bonds and Thrift Stamps.

Kappa Alpha Thetas who were representatives of the Committee for Devastated France helped start schools for French children and cared for orphans. Noted author Dorothy Canfield Fisher, a Kappa Kappa Gamma, led reconstruction efforts in Bellevue-Meudon, France. She enlisted her Kappa sisters for support, inviting them to become “Aunties of Bellevue-Meudon” by sending clothes and money to help the children.

Several groups, including Alpha Gamma Delta and Sigma Kappa, supported the American Red Cross. Kappa Alpha Theta gave $3,800 (more than $88,000 in 2013 funds) to equip the nurses of one base hospital. Phi Mu established a nurses’ hut at another base hospital; there a Phi Mu served as hostess. Gamma Phi Beta funded the needs of Belgian children as did Delta Gamma. Gamma Phi Beta’s fundraising efforts took place in theater lobbies where they set up a milk bottle campaign to collect change.

Chi Omega supported two workers in the devastated areas of France and contributed to the YWCA’s Overseas Service. Alpha Omicron Pi gave funds for relief work in France’s Chateau-Thierry district while Alpha Chi Omega donated funds to help three French villages.

Two groups set up rooms for French female industrial workers. Alpha Phi maintained one in Roanne for the women who worked in the munitions factories. Delta Delta Delta helped support one in Tours.

European war orphans were “adopted” by many organizations including Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Omicron Pi, Gamma Phi Beta, and Delta Zeta. It was not a physical adoption, but a monetary one, with funds being sent to an overseas organization to be used for the care of the children. Each Sigma Kappa chapter adopted an orphan. Almost every Alpha Delta Pi chapter and alumnae club adopted an Armenian orphan. In 1918-19, Alpha Chi Omega adopted 67 French orphans.

Some groups assisted foreign students. Pi Beta Phi helped six French girls who were studying in Minnesota colleges and a Serbian girl who studied at Westhampton College. They were provided with funds to be used for books, warm clothes and travel. Delta Gamma helped educate an Armenian girl.

The work done during World War I gave the NPC organizations a good foundation for increased philanthropic efforts. In the 1921 Story of Gamma Phi Beta, Lindsey Barbee made an interesting observation. Although she was speaking of Gamma Phi Beta’s efforts, the sentiments can be transferred to the other NPC groups. She wrote, “The war work taught the sorority not only the beauty of service but the splendid possibilities of concerted action. From coast to coast, Gamma Phis met the national crisis with courage, with efficiency and with timeless endeavor; and thereby they experienced the happiness of making a real effort and a real sacrifice and the inward contentment which comes from filling a need, from relieving suffering and from being a vital part in the world struggle.” 

*Parts of this post originally appeared on the Circle of Sisterhood blog. I urge you to visit the Circle of Sisterhood website. It’s an organization very worthy of support.  http://www.circleofsisterhood.org/

Dr. May Agness Hopkins in uniform

Dr. May Agness Hopkins, Zeta Tau Alpha’s Grand President, in uniform.


 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Phi, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Fran Favorite, Gamma Phi Beta, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, National Panhellenic Conference, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Beta Phi, Presidents, Sigma Kappa, Sorority History, Women's Fraternity History, Zeta Tau Alpha | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Veterans Day, Another Day to Recognize Philanthropy, and a Special Gift to the Circle of Sisterhood

Sigma Gamma Rho Founders’ Day and the Hattie McDaniel Cancer Awareness and Health Program

Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. was founded on November 12, 1922 by seven young women educators in Indianapolis, Indiana. On December 30, 1929, a charter was granted to the Alpha chapter at Butler University making the organization a national college sorority. It is the only one of the National Pan-Hellenic Conference sororities not founded at Howard University, site of the Alpha chapters of  Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, and Zeta Phi Beta.

Sigma Gamma Rho’s founders are Nannie Mae Gahn Johnson, Mary Lou Allison Little, Vivian White Marbury, Bessie M. Downey Martin, Cubena McClure, Hattie Mae Dulin Redford, and Dorothy Hanley Whiteside.

When the Los Angeles chapter of Sigma Gamma Rho was founded in July 1939, actress Hattie McDaniel was one of its founding members. Her role as “Mammy” in Gone With the Wind earned her an Academy Award. She was the first African American woman to win the award. She was also the first African American woman to sing on American radio. She has been honored with two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for her contributions to radio and the other for her contributions to motion pictures. In 2006, she became the first African American Academy Award winner to be honored with a U.S. postage stamp.

Breast cancer claimed McDaniel’s life in 1952 at the age of 57. Sigma Gamma Rho created the Hattie McDaniel Cancer Awareness and Health Program in her honor and memory. The mission of the program is to provide education and support of early detection of breast, prostate, ovarian, colon and other cancers as well as research for prevention of the cancers.

Hattie McD

 


 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Butler University, Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Sigma Gamma Rho, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Sigma Gamma Rho Founders’ Day and the Hattie McDaniel Cancer Awareness and Health Program