Marcia Wallace, Delta Zeta

In the 1970s, Marcia Wallace played the wise-cracking receptionist Carol Kester on the Bob Newhart Show. After that series ended, she became a mainstay on game shows. To generations of fans of The Simpsons she will always be Edna Krabappel, Bart Simpson’s fourth-grade teacher (“Do what I mean, not what I say” was one of her well used lines). Wallace won the Outstanding Voice-Over Performance Emmy in 1992.

Wallace, a Delta Zeta, died on October 25, 2013, due to complications from breast cancer. She was a native of Creston, Iowa. After graduating from Creston High School, she entered Parsons College in Fairfield, Iowa, majoring in English and Theater. Parsons College was founded in 1875; it went bankrupt in 1973 and it had a storied history. The Delta Nu chapter of Delta Zeta at Parsons was chartered in 1957 and it closed in 1971 when the college closed. (Parson’s story is an interesting one and worth a trip down the rabbit hole.)

Wallace was awarded  Delta Zeta’s 2009 Woman of the Year Award. She attended the 2010 Delta Zeta convention. To see Wallace being interviewed by The Lamp Editor Nancy Brewer at the convention, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-TTZNUXDAU. Wallace recounted that “my Delta Zeta sisters had my back.” She also credits her chapter advisor with being “like a surrogate family to me” and helping her to be the woman she became.

My condolences to her family and her Delta Zeta family.

Marcia Wallace and The Lamp Editor at the 2010 Delta Zeta Convention in Tucson, Arizona.

Marcia Wallace and The Lamp Editor Nancy Brewer at the 2010 Delta Zeta Convention in Tucson, Arizona.

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

Posted in Delta Zeta, Notable Fraternity Women, Notable Sorority Women | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Marcia Wallace, Delta Zeta

“All Women Are Lifted Up By Heights Attained By One Woman” 17th NPC Meeting, 1921

The 17th National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) meeting took place from October 26-29, 1921; it was chaired by Ethel Hayward Weston, Sigma Kappa. She was the first NPC delegate to serve six years on the Executive Council. The meeting took place at the Hotel Claypool in Indianapolis at the corner of Illinois and Washington Streets. The hotel was torn down in 1969 and a retail mall, Claypool Court, replaced it.

The Hotel Claypool

The Hotel Claypool

A report written by Kappa Delta was circulated to the editors of the NPC magazines. Part of the report follows: 

Hurried, worried looking women rushed through the mezzanine at nine in the morning and again at noon. In the hours between many voices were evident in Parlor ‘B’ and had one ‘listened in’ he would have heard many interesting discussions. . . . The first work of the Congress is always the hearing of individual fraternity reports and reports from the executive and standing committees of the Congress. Many of the fraternities have been devoting their energies these last two years to the development of their internal organizations. More central offices have been established to facilitate the handling of routine business and uniform systems of various kinds adopted for chapter routine business.

Extension has been general, sixty-seven chapters having been installed by the eighteen fraternities and forty-three alumnae groups having formed associations or chapters.

The effect of the work undertaken is shown in the continuing continuing of philanthropic work by the fraternities in the adoption of national service. Some war work in foreign countries is being continued: in one instance an Armenian girl is being educated. A vacation home and a summer camp for children have been established, a school for isolated children on the Maine coast is in operation; active support of the National Child’s Welfare Association has been carried on; a child welfare truck is being sent through one state, and work with the Crippled Children’s Hospital in Richmond is successful.

Scholarship loan funds are general and are becoming more and more extensive, some operating even outside their own membership. Building loan funds are also increasing in number as the fraternities find it increasingly necessary to assist their chapters in establishing suitable homes. Endowments are also becoming more common as the necessity for sinking funds to meet future demands is realized. 

Vocations, careers if you will, is something no longer discussed at NPC meetings. After all, sorority women have been to outer space. In the 1920s, it was a hot topic and it was out of this sort of discussion that the Panhellenic House in New York City was born.

Round Table on Vocations, was written by Sigma Kappa and it accompanied other reports about the meeting. Mary C. Love Collins, Chi Omega’s National President and NPC Delegate, led the round table discussion on Vocations:

Dr. Collins has a masterly mind and a keen sense of humor, which happy combinations made for a delightful and most helpful discussion.

The choice of vocation takes in the inherent gifts of people, and also the social conditions and environment. Economic Independence for women would mean happier marriages, for then we would have marriages of choice and not of necessity.

The relation between economic burdens and standards of living should be understood. The world war has made economical independence for women more assured. Along with woman’s economical independence goes increased consumption of goods.

In woman’s choice of a vocation imitation will play its part. It used to be teach or marry, but now there is more liberty in choice of a  profession. There are not enough women in medicine, in law, or in architecture to help in imitation. We should urge advanced professions for women. ‘All women are lifted up by heights attained by one woman.’

…. Mrs. Collins briefly touched on the new field for women in politics. She believe that women should enter this field, that is, capable women who have leisure to do so, and who have had some business experience. Mrs. Collins herself has been asked to run for practically every office in her own state (Kentucky) except that of governor.

In the discussion it was brought out that so few women are going into the teaching profession these days, that something should be done to encourage them to consider teaching. It would seem that an unjust stigma has fallen upon this noblest of professions which we should all strive to eradicate. Higher salaries would play an important part, here, also.

mary love collins sign


 

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

Posted in Chi Omega, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Mary Love Collins, National Panhellenic Conference, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on “All Women Are Lifted Up By Heights Attained By One Woman” 17th NPC Meeting, 1921

Happy Founders’ Day to Delta Zeta and Alpha Epsilon Phi

Two National Panhellenic Conference groups, Delta Zeta and Alpha Epsilon Phi, were founded on October 24. In 1902, Delta Zeta made its debut at Miami University in Ohio; Alpha Epsilon Phi was founded in 1909 at Barnard College in New York City.

Delta Zeta’s founders are Alfa Lloyd, Mary Collins, Anna Keen, Julia Bishop, Mabelle Minton, and Ann Simmons. I find it so very interesting that Delta Zeta’s history includes the heritage of several other NPC organizations, for it has absorbed or merged with several other former NPC groups. Between 1941 and 1962, the members of four other NPC groups became members of Delta Zeta. The organizations with which Delta Zeta has absorbed or merged include Beta Phi Alpha, Theta Upsilon, Phi Omega Pi, and Delta Sigma Epsilon. Prior to these groups becoming a part of Delta Zeta, many had themselves merged with other groups.

The first group to become a part of Delta Zeta was Beta Phi Alpha; it was founded as Bide-a-wee on May 8, 1909 at the University of California-Berkeley. A few months later, the name changed to Aldebaran, In 1919, it became Kappa Phi Alpha. It then changed its name to Beta Phi Alpha. In 1923, Beta Phi Alpha joined NPC. On June 22, 1941, Beta Phi Alpha was absorbed by Delta Zeta. At that point, 30 chapters had been installed and there were 3,000 members. Beta Phi Alpha’s “Convention Lights” is still sung at the close of Delta Zeta conventions.

Phi Omega Pi was founded at the University of Nebraska on March 5, 1910. In its early years, membership was limited to those belonging to the Order of the Eastern Star. In 1931, this restriction was eliminated. It was granted associate NPC membership in 1930 and full membership in 1933. On October 1 of that year, Sigma Phi Beta, founded at New York University on November 1, 1920 under the name of Sigma Sigma Omicron, was absorbed by Phi Omega Pi. On August 10, 1946, Delta Zeta absorbed Phi Omega Pi.

Delta Sigma Epsilon was founded on September 23, 1914 at Miami University. In the fall of 1941, Pi Delta Theta merged with Delta Sigma Epsilon. In 1956, Delta Sigma Epsilon was absorbed by Delta Zeta. At the time of the merger more than 13,000 women had been initiated as Delta Sigma Epsilons members in its 52 chapters. 

Theta Upsilon was founded at the University of California-Berkeley in 1914. Its roots can be traced to 1909 when a group of women rented a house on Walnut Street that they called “Walnut Shell.” On January 1, 1914, they organized as the Mekatina (“Among the Hills”) Club. Theta Upsilon was granted associate NPC membership in 1923 and full membership in 1928. In September 1933, Lambda Omega, which was founded on May 5, 1923 at the University of California-Berkeley, became a part of Theta Upsilon. On May 6, 1962, Theta Upsilon became a part of Delta Zeta.

Crown Princess Martha of Norway, Delta Zeta

Crown Princess Martha of Norway, Delta Zeta

To read more about Princess Martha of Norway, a Delta Zeta, see http://wp.me/p20I1i-qA

Alpha Epsilon Phi

Alpha Epsilon Phi was founded in Helen Phillips’ room. She had the inspiration for the group as a way to stay in closer contact with her friends. The other founders are Ida Beck, Rose Gerstein, Augustina “Tina” Hess, Lee Reiss, Stella Strauss and Rose Salmowitz.

The seven shared their Jewish heritage. A second chapter was quickly founded two months later at nearby Hunter College. The founding chapter at Barnard was closed when the college banned Greek-letter organizations in 1913.

Today, Alpha Epsilon Phi notes that the organization is a Jewish sorority, “but not a religious organization, with membership open to all college women, regardless of religion, who honor, respect and appreciate our Jewish identity and are comfortable in a culturally Jewish environment.”

Some of Alpha Epsilon Phi’s early philanthropic efforts include providing aid to the Jewish victims of World War I. The March 21, 1919 New York Times includes a headline “A Dance for Jewish War Relief.” The dance took place on March 22, 1919 at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The patronesses were listed and they included Mrs. Henry Morganthau, Mrs. Michael Friedman, Mrs. Israel Unterberg, Mrs. Albert Stern, Mrs. Fred Stern, and Mrs. Irving Lehman. 

During World War II, Alpha Epsilon Phi adopted another project to benefit the war effort. They raised $1,500 and donated a fully equipped ambulance and canteen unit. The Nu Chapter at the University of Pittsburgh held a bridge party at the Schenley Hotel on December 20, 1942. The two co-chairmen from the active chapter were Harriet Harris and Shirley Sheffler. Sarah Pitler served as the alumnae club representative. There were to be door prizes and a $25 war bond was raffled.

On April 13, 1942, an ambulance was turned over to U.S. Army at a ceremony held at the Hotel New Yorker in New York City. The ambulance had a silver plaque on it acknowledging it as a gift from Alpha Epsilon Phi. 


 

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

Posted in Alpha Epsilon Phi, Barnard College, Delta Zeta, Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, Miami University, Sorority History | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Happy Founders’ Day to Delta Zeta and Alpha Epsilon Phi

Happy Founders’ Day, Kappa Delta and a Snippet about Olga Achtenhagen, the “Hiking Professor”

Kappa Delta was founded on October 23, 1897 at the State Female Normal School (now Longwood University) in Farmville, Virginia. Its founders are Lenora Ashmore Blackiston, Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson, Sara Turner White and Mary Sommerville Sparks Hendrick.

Among the charter members of Kappa Delta’s Psi Chapter at Lawrence College in Appleton, Wisconsin was Olga Achtenhagen.  The year was 1918. After graduating from Lawrence, Achtenhagen earned additional degrees from Columbia University and Oxford University. Her trip to England for study may well have been her first trip abroad, but it was far from her last.

Achtenhagen taught at Appleton High School and was on the Lawrence College faculty until the late 1930s. She was nicknamed the “hiking professor” and it was estimated that on three trips abroad during the 1930s, she walked 3,000 miles.

Her travels were highlighted in convocation talks to the  Lawrence College students. In a 1931 talk about her travels to England and Germany, Achtenhagen told the Lawrence students “my mem­ories of these days of travel are mem­ories of people rather than places. The places we saw were made mem­orable by the people who once lived there.”

She also spoke to civic groups about her travels. On January 5, 1936, she spoke to the County Nurses’ Association  in Neenah (WI). Her subject was “Summer in Capri,” the Italian island where she spent several weeks during the summer of 1935.

She served Kappa Delta as National President (1931-35) and she spent six years as Angelos Editor. Her 1931 Founders’ Day message was a heartfelt one,  “Our founders’ faith in each other made it possible for them to work together; their hope in a living God made their vision seem attainable; and their gift of love converted a dream to reality.”

In a 1934 talk about her travels she said,  “I like to remember lest I for­get . . . . What I see and what I hear on these occasions usually becomes a symbol of remembrance, and it is  the remembering that matters.”

In 1937, she moved to Plainfield, New Jersey, where she taught English at Plainfield High School.  There she served as Chairman of the English Department and Coordinator of Language Arts. She retired in 1958.

The travel bug never left her and she spent 35 years as a freelance travel writer. Her articles appeared in many publications including the New York Times, Atlantic Monthly and the Christian Science Monitor. She authored novels, poems, and three textbooks. Achtenhagen was a member of the journalism honorary Theta Sigma Phi and Mortar Board.

In 1959, she and two other charter members of the Psi Chapter attended Kappa Delta’s Wisconsin State Day. She spoke about the “Position of the Fraternity.” Achtenhagen died on August 20, 1976 at Sloan Kettering Memorial Hospital in New York City. She was 77 years old. 

Olga

Olga Achtenhagen(C) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Kappa Delta, National Panhellenic Conference, Notable Sorority Women, Sorority History | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Happy Founders’ Day, Kappa Delta and a Snippet about Olga Achtenhagen, the “Hiking Professor”

Book Sale Trivia – Illini Style

This past weekend was spent working at the Friends of the Library book sale. Every now and then, while straightening up, I’d find an interesting book. The 2003 Illio, the University of Illinois yearbook, suddenly appeared and, of course, I found myself turning to the fraternity and sorority section. Sprinkled on the pages were interesting facts which, I sense, were submitted by the chapters. Some had me curious and wanting to learn more.

From the Pi Beta Phi page: “The only female Chief Illiniwek was a Pi Phi.”

Her name was Idelle Stith (Brooks) and, at the time, she wasn’t Chief Illiniwek, she was Princess Illiniwek. Stith was an authentic Indian princess of one thirty-second native blood with the name of Munk-a-Hop, meaning “eldest child.”

Harriet Haycock Brown, a former Pi Beta Phi Historian and, along with Stith, a member of the University of Illinois chapter during World War II, recounted the story in the Summer 1997 Arrow of Pi Beta Phi. The Homecoming game in October 1943 was a unique one in the history of Fighting Illini Homecomings. Most of the former players were serving in the armed forces, band members were few, and the stadium, which normally fit 68,000 people, had about 5,000 people in the stands. According to Brown, “Another problem was finding a Chief Illiniwek to perform the traditional Indian dance at half-time. The position had always been filled by male students who had attained the rank of Eagle Scout and had learned Indian dances. Idelle Stith, Illinois Zeta senior from Fairfax, Okla., stepped into the moccasins, donned the headdress and 40-pound costume made by Western Indians, and danced her way the length of the football field prior to smoking the peace pipe in the customary ceremony.”

Brown noted that there were attempts made to erase Stith’s name from the Chief’s headdress deleting any mention of a female having worn it. According to Brown, some students referred to  Princess Illiniwek as “Illiniwench.” In the 1970s when Chief Illiniwek’s 50th anniversary was celebrated, Brooks “was assured by the other returning chiefs that her name had been returned to the headdress and the title of ‘Chief’ was now hers.”

Idelle Stith with the Chief Illiniwek headdress, 1943. (Photo courtesy of the University of Illinois Archives)

Idelle Stith with the Chief Illiniwek headdress, 1943. (Photo courtesy of the University of Illinois Archives)

 

From the 4-H House page: “The 4-H house is the only 4-H house in the nation.”

In 1934, 4-H member Mary McKee founded the 4-H Cooperative Sorority. Women who have a minimum of three years in a 4-H club or a minimum of three years leadership experience in a widely recognized youth organization are eligible for membership. The women live in the 4-H house.  The group joined the University of Illinois Greek system in 1980. 

The 4-H House is the only 4-H House I could find, but I discovered something similar.  Clovia, at Kansas State University, was formed in 1931 when a group of former 4-H members chose to live together in a cooperative manner. Clovia was founded on September 7, 1931 at Kansas State. A professor suggested the name Clovia, the Greek word for clover. In 1937, a group of University of Minnesota women stayed at the Clovia house in Manhattan while attending a conference a K-State. They returned to Minnesota and formed the Beta Chapter of Clovia. Four additional chapters of Clovia were founded, but are no longer active. The inactive chapters are located at the University of Nebraska, Mankato State University, Fort Hayes State University, and the University of Minnesota-Crookston. Clovia’s Alpha Chapter has lived in its current home since 1967. The house building was funded by former Clovia members and the Kansas 4-H Foundation. Although it was first a member of the Panhellenic Council, it is now an independent cooperative house.

4-H House, University of Illinois

4-H House, University of Illinois

 

From the Theta Xi page: “Benjamin Franklin is the patron saint of Theta Xi.”

William Smith Mason, Yale University Class of 1888, was a member of Theta Xi’s Beta Chapter and a devoted Theta Xi. He was also an avid collector of Benjamin Franklin memorabilia and papers. His collection was first housed in his home in Evanston, Illinois, where he employed a librarian to catalog it and invited Franklin researchers to use it. In 1935, he donated his Franklin collection to Yale University. At that time it was “hailed as the largest and most valuable gift ever made to the Yale Library up to that date,” according to the collection homepage on Yale’s website. Mason played an instrumental role in Theta Xi’s adoption of Franklin as the fraternity’s patron saint.

Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin

There are a few other interesting tidbits I am still researching, including furniture from the Gone With the Wind set, so there may be a second post at some point.

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

Posted in Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Pi Beta Phi, The Arrow of Pi Beta Phi, Theta Xi, University of Illinois, Yale University | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Book Sale Trivia – Illini Style

Researching a Stranger and Finding a Familiar Face

The internet has made so many publications available at the click of a mouse. Last night while looking for some information about a prominent Delta Gamma, I came across, completely by accident, a digitized copy of the Goucher College yearbook. My mother-in-law is a Goucher alumna, so I inserted one of her college years in the web address and a few minutes later I found the first of several pictures of her.

It was so much fun to find her among the college students. I have never known her as anything but a busy mom and grandmother. She graduated college, was married a few months later, and 11 months after that, she gave birth to a son and then three daughters in rapid succession. Aside from her wedding picture, I have never seen a picture of her as a young woman.

As my husband commented about the yearbooks, “They’re wonderful! My mother as the business manager of the yearbook. Never would have guessed that in a million years.” She was also the President of the Outing Club. Her degree was in American Civilization (who knew?). She loved her time at Goucher and still talks about the classes she took and the professors who taught them.

She is an Alpha Phi. However, all the women’s fraternities were disbanded during her years at Goucher after the campus moved from downtown Baltimore to rural Towson.* I only found a picture of the Alpha Phis during her freshman year when she was a pledge.

Several years ago, when I was doing some research at the Student Life Archives at the University of Illinois, I made a copy of this entry from the Alpha Phi Quarterly to give to  my husband. It is from the year his mother pledged the Zeta Chapter of Alpha Phi. His parents met at the dance with the Hopkins Phi Gams. It was only in the planning stages when this chapter report was written. I’m glad it took place because the rest is history.

alpha phi zeta crop*To read more about the once active women’s fraternity system at Goucher College, see http://wp.me/p20I1i-Kg


 

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

Posted in Alpha Phi, Fran Favorite, Goucher College, Phi Gamma Delta | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Researching a Stranger and Finding a Familiar Face

10/16/1913 – Lillian Thompson, Gamma Phi Beta, Calls to Order the 12th NPC Meeting

The meeting of 12th National Pan-Hellenic Congress (now known as the National Panhellenic Conference – NPC) opened on October 16, 1913 at the Congress Hotel in Chicago. Gamma Phi Beta Lillian Thompson chaired the meeting.

“Last year, when she became chairman of the Executive Committee she was described in The Crescent as being ‘fortified by vast experience, fully equipped for all phases of the work, calm, well balanced and fair-minded in all that she may direct.’ The year just past has proved her worthy of this characterization. All who attended the recent Congress, felt much of its success was due to its efficient chairman,” wrote Sarah Pomeroy, Editor of The Arrow of Pi Beta Phi.

Thompson attended the first NPC meeting in 1902 and had a broad base of Panhellenic experience prior to becoming Chairman. After the 1913 meeting, she said, “It is astonishing to me, as I look back, to note the unruffled peace and good will of our conferences. Even when there were disputes to settle, there was no bitterness and suspicion. Everyone knew that everyone else was trying to find out what was best and how to do it. This feeling of kindliness and confidence has been the greatest result of our meetings. If we can pass this on to the fraternity world, we shall have done the one thing necessary to remove all criticism of fraternities. It was prophesied that quarrels would break up these inter-sorority meetings in five years. Ten years have passed, and no quarrel has yet appeared. The meetings have expanded from one afternoon to two days. The luncheons have grown from less than twenty to more than three hundred, and include not only delegates, but all fraternity girls who can attend. The name has changed from the tentative ‘Intersorority Conference,’ to the well established ‘Pan-Hellenic Congress.’ But the spirit of those first kindly, intimate meetings has not changed, but has grown in strength, bringing with it to the delegates many valued personal friends, and a broader and more generous fraternity outlook.”

R. Louise Fitch, Editor of The Trident authored an article entitled “The Spirit of the National Pan-Hellenic Congress” which appeared in many fraternity magazines. She wrote, “There is only one fault to find with the N.P.C. this year – it could not be held simultaneously in every city where dwells a fraternity woman. Could that have been possible, there would be no more ‘disaffected’ alumnae, and no more even with a lukewarm interest. Fourteen of the eighteen delegates had been present the year before, so no time was lost explaining preceding affairs. The opinion was general that this year, really for the first time, non-essentials were eliminated and the time was almost entirely devoted to problems of consequence. When eighteen women, some with from four to sixteen years experience in college and fraternity affairs, spend three days together discussing such things as scholarship, fraternity house rules, social conditions, elimination of high school fraternities, deans of women, vocational activities, etc., something is bound to be accomplished. I am not to tell you in detail of deeds performed but to try to give you the spirit of the Congress. This is my seventh Congress and without any reservation it was by far the best. In times past, there has sometimes cropped out a little air of superiority, a tiny uptilt of the nose over some proposition advanced, a slight tendency to believe the wrong done was by ‘your chapter, never by mine.’ This year we were all equals – very frankly admitting our own faults, and working together for the advancement of Fraternity, not each her own.”

Lillian Thompson, a member of Gamma Phi Beta's second chapter at the University of Michigan, was Gamma Phi's National Panhellenic Conference Delegate for 34 years. She served as Chairman of the 1913 meeting.

Lillian Thompson, a member of Gamma Phi Beta’s second chapter at the University of Michigan, was Gamma Phi’s National Panhellenic Conference Delegate for 34 years. She served as Chairman of the 1913 meeting.

There were 470 in attendance for the Panhellenic luncheon which took place at Patten Gymnasium on the Northwestern University campus. Alpha Phi had 55 members attending, Pi Phi 51, and Tri Delta 47. Fraternity songs were sung between the food courses.

The Panhellenic Luncheon at Northwestern University's Patten Gymnasium, October 1913.

The Panhellenic Luncheon at Northwestern University’s Patten Gymnasium, October 1913 (this is the original Patten Gymnasium, not the one that is currently on NU’s campus).


 

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

Posted in Fran Favorite, Fraternity meetings, Gamma Phi Beta, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, National Panhellenic Conference, The Arrow of Pi Beta Phi, The Crescent of Gamma Phi Beta, The Trident of Delta Delta Delta, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on 10/16/1913 – Lillian Thompson, Gamma Phi Beta, Calls to Order the 12th NPC Meeting

Happy Founders’ Day to Alpha Chi Omega and Zeta Tau Alpha!

October 15 is the founding day of both Alpha Chi Omega and Zeta Tau Alpha. Alpha Chi Omega was founded at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana, in 1885, Thirteen years later, in 1898, Zeta Tau Alpha was founded at the State Female Normal School (now Longwood College) in Virginia. Alpha Chi Omega is first in the alphabetical listing of the 26 National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) organizations and Zeta Tau Alpha is the last. Isn’t it fun that they were founded on the same day of the year?

Music has been an important part of Alpha Chi Omega since its very beginning. In an 1885 issue of Brianard’s Musical World, it was noted that in Greencastle Indiana, “Mr. James H. Howe gave a recital on October 18 at the Music Hall. The recital was devoted to Schumann and the programme was made up from this master’s works. We are glad to see such a good programme and hope to hear from the Alpha Chi Omega Fraternity again. Success to DePaw (sic) and her musical interests.”

According to the 1928 Alpha Chi history,  “Following the custom of the majority of Fraternities at that time, the founders of Alpha Chi Omega placed a clause in the constitution providing for Honorary Members.”  In all, 15 women were initiated as Honorary Members. The women were well-known in their day, although much of their renown has faded with time.

On April 23, 1886, the Alpha chapter initiated Julia Rive-King as an Honorary Member and the chapter gave a reception in her honor after the initiation. Rive-King made her debut in Cincinnati in 1874, officially debuted the next year with the New York Philharmonic. In 1876, she married her manager and added composer and teacher to her resume.

Two years later, on April 3, 1888, the Alpha chapter initiated Fannie Bloomfield-Zeisler. “The girls were all delighted with the genuine interest she took in their work. The reception given in her honor was in every way a success,” according to a chapter report. At the age of six, Bloomfield-Zeisler began picking out tunes on the piano. At the age of 11 she made her playing debut. She then went to Vienna for study. In January 1885, she debuted in New York City. Bloomfield-Zeisler was Jewish and she is perhaps Alpha Chi’s first Jewish member.

The chapter at the University of Michigan reported on the May Festival which took place in Ann Arbor from May 18-21, 1894, “Among the artists were several Alpha Chis most notable of whom was Madame Fannie Bloomfield-Zeisler. The ovation she received was the event of the festival.”

The History of Alpha Chi Omega gives this information about Honorary Members, “From time to time the various chapters initiated other Honorary Members, which practice gave rise to the inevitable question of specific qualifications for such membership. Consequently the 1898 Convention voted that only musicians of national repute should be initiated as Honorary Members, while musicians of local reputation could be initiated by the chapters as Associate Members.”

In 1908, the Grand Chapter ruled that Honorary Members could be initiated only upon the unanimous vote of all the chapters, and that Associate Members would no longer be allowed. In the end there were 15 women, talented musicians and patrons of the arts, who were initiated as Honorary Members. Below is a list of the other 13 Honorary initiates.

Neally Stevens was a talented pianist.

Teresa Careno, a Venezuelan pianist, singer, composer and conductor, performed for Abraham Lincoln at the White House. She also worked with Edward MacDowell, early in his career.

Adele Aus Der Ohe was a friend of Tchaikovsky. She performed his First Piano Concerto at the inaugural concert at Carnegie Hall. During her stay in Ann Arbor in 1904 she was made an honorary member. (The chapter was acquainted with her from 1894 when she played a concert in Ann Arbor – the one where Fannie Bloomfield-Zeisler performed).

Amy Mary Cheney Beach was the first woman whose work was performed by the Boston Symphony.

Marie Decca was identified in the 1921 history as a member of the Alpha chapter; I suspect she was a member of Delta chapter. I found this in an 1893 Allegheny College magazine, and  it speaks to the 1890s and Alpha Chi Omega. “Now, though but two years old, our active membership-roll shows sixteen names; our alumnae, nine, and our honorary, three, among the latter Marie Decca, the famous concert singer. Our work is primarily musical, as shown by the programs rendered, otherwise Alpha Chi Omega differs not from college fraternities—our rites are as mysterious, our vows as binding, and our goat quite as ferocious. The name of the fraternity is now commonly shortened into Alpha Chi, but for some time we were dubbed ‘The Conservative Old Maids,’ a title we bore with patience, feeling sure that Time, the great wonder-worker, would change all that. Even so already are there deserters from this ‘sisterhood of spinsters,’ but the majority have clung to their art. Of the graduates of ’92, seven are Alpha Chi’s, and this year seven more will receive diplomas. Two of the charter members are now included in the faculty, and several others are teaching at their homes. Thus through its members the aim of the fraternity, which is the advancement of music, is being carried out.”

Helen Hopekirk Wilson, a Scottish concert pianist, resided in Boston. One of her most valuable works was a volume of Scottish folk songs.

Mary Howe Lavin was a Brattleboro, Vermont, native. It was written that “There is something indescribably fascinating in the singing and personal appearance of this charming woman.”

Margaret Ruthven Lang studied violin first in Boston and then in Munich. She also studied orchestration and was Edward MacDowell’s composition student.

Maud Powell was a violinist. During the 1893 Columbian Exposition she and another Alpha Chi Honorary initiate, Mary Cheney Beach, played Beach’s romance for piano and violin for the first time in public at one of the concerts of the musical congress.

Antonette Szumowska Adamowski, a Poland born pianist, was on the faculty of the New England Conservatory of Music. She played in Europe until 1894 when she came to the US. She served as a judge for a musical competition that the Alpha chapter sponsored. In the November 1917 Lyre, it was reported that “On the afternoon of November 22, 1917 occurred the debut of Miss Helenka Adamowski the daughter of Madame Szumowska Adamowski at their home in Cambridge Massachusetts.” As an aside, Madame Adamowski’s daughter, Helenka, married a man named Pantaleoni. Her granddaughter, the Alpha Chi Honorary member’s great-granddaughter, is actress Tea Leoni.

Adele Verne was considered one of the greatest woman pianists of her era. She  performed the first television performance of Mozart’s Concerto for 2 Pianos.

Ellen Beach Yaw Cannon was known as “Lark Ellen.” She had an extraordinary vocal range and could produce unusually high notes. Some say she was the only soprano of her era who could sing and sustain the D above high D. She was also a philanthropist. In the November 1920 Lyre, an article told of Epsilon chapter’s effort to help Lark Ellen’s philanthropy, “There is in Los Angeles a home for boys from the ages of seven to twelve years called the Lark Ellen Home. This home is financed by Ellen Beach Yaw, an honorary member of Epsilon Chapter. This year we thought it would be a fine plan to do something for the little fellows. It was decided to spend the afternoon of the eleventh of November there. Eighteen girls met that morning and saw the Armistice Day parade. Then after lunch we drove out to the home. The twenty boys in the home had not been informed of our coming and they were quite surprised to see us. Each of the girls had brought either jam jelly or canned fruit. The two matrons in charge invited us into the children’s little play house. Here we sang songs and recited for them. The little fellows were very happy and seemed to enjoy it all. But the crowning feature occurred when bananas, cookies and bright sticks of candy were presented to them. After all this pleased them the most. The girls enjoyed the day and we are sure the boys were made a little happier by our coming.”

The last Honorary initiate was Marion MacDowell, wife of Edward MacDowell. She was initiated on January 5, 1916 in Boston. At the 1926 National Convention at Lake Louise, Alpha Chi Omega’s awarded her its Distinguished Service Medal for “her incomparable service to the world in establishing the MacDowell Colony at Peterboro (sic) and in every way her command promoting the American world of the arts.”

Alpha Chi Omega’s devotion to the MacDowell Colony has been long and endearing. For more about the MacDowell Colony see this post from last year http://wp.me/p20I1i-oM . (I would love to mention that I just noticed that my favorite composer Stephen Sondheim, a member of Beta Theta Pi, was awarded the 2013 Edward MacDowell Medal on August 11, 2013. And thanks, too, to Alpha Chi Omega’s Sigma Sigma Alumnae Club for asking me to speak at Founders’ Day. This material is from my talk.)

AXO

ZTA2

On October 15, 1898, Zeta Tau Alpha was founded at the State Female Normal School, now Longwood University, in Farmville, Virginia, by Alice Maud Jones Horner, Frances Yancey Smith, Alice Bland Coleman, Ethel Coleman Van Name, Ruby Bland Leigh Orgain, Mary Campbell Jones Batte, Helen May Crafford, Della Lewis Hundley, and Alice Grey Welsh.

One of Zeta’s symbols is the strawberry. Founder Mary Campbell “Cammie” Jones (Batte) was sent a gift of strawberries by an admirer. Today, strawberries can be found in any American supermarket at any time of the year. In the 1890s, they were a rare and very special treat. This gift of strawberries was the inspiration for the first purely social gathering called a “Strawberry Feast.” It was Zeta’s first social event and it proved a turning point in the history of the organization. For Zeta Tau Alpha members the world over, the strawberry has become a symbol of inspiration. 

strawberryFor more about Zeta Tau Alpha and Dr. May Agness Hopkins, one of Zeta’s early Grand Presidents, see http://wp.me/p20I1i-pj


 

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

Posted in Alpha Chi Omega, DePauw University, Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Longwood University, National Panhellenic Conference, Women's Fraternity History, Zeta Tau Alpha | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Happy Founders’ Day to Alpha Chi Omega and Zeta Tau Alpha!

143 Years of Sisterhood! Happy Birthday, Kappa Kappa Gamma!

Happy Founders’ Day, Kappa Kappa Gamma. This past Wednesday, I visited Stewart House in Monmouth, Illinois, the former home of Kappa Founder, Mary Moore “Minnie” Stewart. It is always a treat to visit Stewart House. The home and gardens are wonderful and with just the blink of an eye one is transported back to 1870 and the exciting events that took place that year.

Stewart House, October 2013 (Photo by Amanda Pilger)

Stewart House, October 2013 (Photo by Amanda Pilger)

Kappa Kappa Gamma’s founders are Mary Moore “Minnie” Stewart, Anna Elizabeth Willits, Susan Burley Walker, Hanna Jeanette “Jennie” Boyd, Mary Louise “Lou” Bennett,  and Martha Louisa “Lou” Stevenson. Some of the founders recalled that the organization was founded in March, 1870, but that the appearance was delayed until fall, because the badges had been difficult to procure.  Willet’s mother was the one who came up with the idea of using a key as the badge.  The first badges were made by the Bennett’s family jeweler who was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  In order to have the badges made, 12 had to be ordered at a price of $5 each.  The Kappa Kappa Gamma’s first public appearance at chapel took place on October 13, 1870 and since the 1876 Convention, October 13 has been celebrated as Founders’ Day (Burton-Roth & Whiting-Westermann, 1932).

The Monmouth College Courier noted the fraternity’s debut in an October 1870 issue, “They wear a little golden key, sometimes on their foreheads, sometimes on their little blue or red jackets. . . . It has three letters on it, KKG. . . We have been able to count only six of them” (“Kappa Kappa Gamma,” 1870, p. 4).

At a June 1874 meeting, the Senate of Monmouth College, under pressure from some sections of the United Presbyterian Church, passed the following resolution, “It shall be unlawful for any student of the college hereafter to become a member of any secret college fraternity or to connect with any chapter of any such fraternity, and also for an active member of such fraternity to be admitted as a student in the college” (Donaldson, 1967, p. 71).

At first the resolution had little impact, but pressure from devout United Presbyterians grew.  Some refused to donate money to the financially struggling institution.  In early 1878, the Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter bowed to pressure and disbanded (Spring, 1936).

What is amazing to me is that both Kappa Kappa Gamma and Pi Beta Phi, founded at Monmouth in 1867, were able to withstand the demise of their Alpha chapter.

A local sorority, Kappa Alpha Sigma, became the Alpha Deuteron Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma on October 13, 1934, returning the fraternity to its founding home at Monmouth College.

Stewart House, October 2013 (Photo by Amanda Pilger)

Stewart House, October 2013 (Photo by Amanda Pilger)

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

Posted in Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Kappa Kappa Gamma, National Panhellenic Conference, Notable Sorority Women, Sorority History | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Holt House and Stewart House – THE Places to Visit in Monmouth, Illinois

I am in Monmouth, Illinois, for the Holt House Committee meeting. Holt House is the home in which Pi Beta Phi was founded on April 28, 1867. The Committee also visited Kappa Kappa Gamma’s Stewart House.

IMG_5413

The Monmouth Duo, Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Kappa Gamma, were founded there in 1867 and 1870, respectively. If you visit Monmouth, you will be able to get a glimpse of what life was like when the two organizations were founded.

The home of “Major” Jacob Holt at 402 E. First Avenue, is the founding site of Pi Beta Phi. Today Holt House is open to the public. It  is decorated as it might have been in 1867, when Libbie Brook (Gaddis) and Ada Bruen (Grier), two friends from nearby Henderson County, rented the front southwest bedroom from the Holt family. It was there in that room that the organization was founded on April 28, 1867.

Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded on October 13, 1870. The former home of Mary “Minnie” Stewart, the Stewart House, is also open for tours.  She was the chapter’s first President and Kappa’s first Grand President. Kappa’s Constitution was written in the home and the charter was signed there as well. The chapter had many of its first meetings in the home.

Stewart House (Photo by Amanda Pilger)

Stewart House (Photo by Amanda Pilger)

What I find most amazing about both organizations is the they survived the dissolution of the chapters at Monmouth College. Both Kappa Kappa Gamma and Pi Beta Phi had to close their founding chapters in the early 1880s when the College yielded to pressure from the United Presbyterian Church to ban all the fraternities from campus. Both organizations expanded shortly after their formations and the younger chapters were able to keep the organizations viable and growing.

Both Alpha chapters were returned; Pi Phi in the 1920s and Kappa in the 1930s. And both chapters, along with Alpha Xi Delta, are still on campus today.

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

Posted in Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Greek-letter Organization History, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Monmouth College, National Panhellenic Conference, Pi Beta Phi, Women's Fraternity History | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Holt House and Stewart House – THE Places to Visit in Monmouth, Illinois