Happy Founders’ Day to Delta Zeta and Alpha Epsilon Phi!

October 24 is Founders’ Day for two NPC groups – Delta Zeta and Alpha Epsilon Phi. The first was founded in 1902 at Miami University in Ohio and the latter 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. The likely most royal of Delta Zeta’s members is Crown Princess Martha of Norway. She along with her lady-in-waiting, Countess Ragni Ostgaard, became  members of Delta Zeta after visiting the University of North Dakota. In 1939, the two women were initiated in a ceremony presided over by Myrtle Graeter Malott, National President. Later that year, Bobye Lou Utter and Rena Charnley, members of the Delta Zeta chapter at the University of Pittsburgh, presented corsages to the Crown Princess Martha and the Countess during the royal’s visit to Pittsburgh. In March 1948,a newspaper account noted that the Pittsburgh chapter members were making layettes for Norway, a national  Delta Zeta project.

Crown Princess Martha of Norway,       Delta Zeta

In 1909, seven Barnard College students –  Helen Phillips, Ida Beck, Rose Gerstein, Augustina “Tina” Hess, Lee Reiss, Stella Strauss and Rose Salmowitz – came together and created an organization spurred on Phillips’ inspiration. She sought a way to stay in closer contact with her friends; Alpha Epsilon Phi was founded in her room.

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.”

Alpha Epsilon Phi is the only NPC group that can claim a United States Supreme Court Justice among its membership. Ruth Bader Ginsburg became a member of the chapter at Cornell University. Another distinguished alumna is Nancy Goodman Brinker, Founder of the Susan G. Komen for the Cure and a former U.S. ambassador. Brinker was initiated at the University of Illinois.

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Happy Founders’ Day Kappa Delta

Kappa Delta was founded on October 23, 1897 at the State Female Normal School (now Longwood University) in Farmville, Virginia. Its founders were Lenora Ashmore Blackiston, Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson, Sara Turner White and Mary Sommerville Sparks Hendrick. Kappa Delta, along with Zeta Tau Alpha, Sigma Sigma Sigma and Alpha Sigma Alpha, were founded at the same institution and comprise the “Farmville Four.” (Two of them joined the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) and the other two became members of the Association of Education Sororities (AES) – before AES members became a part of NPC but that is a story for another day.)

Kappa Delta is likely the only National Panhellenic Conference organization that can claim a U.S. President’s granddaughter as a founder. Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson’s grandfather was John Tyler. Her father was the President of the College of William and Mary. She designed Kappa Delta’s badge. Wilson spent an additional year in Farmville and then transferred to Dana Hall in Massachusetts. There she prepared to enter Wellesley College. She graduated from Wellesley in 1904.

Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson

Of the other founders, only Hendrick played a major role in helping the organization grow. Blackiston transferred to Randolph-Macon Women’s College shortly after Kappa Delta was founded. White did not return after her first year.

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Whistle a Happy (Sorority) Tune……

Sorority whistles may have been the first social media used by National Panhellenic Conference organizations. Imagine being on a campus and hearing your organization’s whistle. What a comforting sound it must have been, knowing sisters were close at hand.

Sorority whistles first appeared in the 1880s and by the 1910s, many of the National Panhellenic Conference organizations seem to have adopted a whistle.

Alpha Chi Omega’s whistle was “officially recorded for the first time on May 24, 1887, when a  motion was passed that it be inserted in the Constitution.”

The Pi Beta Phi whistle was adopted by the organization’s 1890 Convention.

Pi Beta Phi Whistle

Chi Omega’s whistle was adopted at its 1904 convention.

In 1907, at Sigma Sigma Sigma’s fourth convention, the whistle “now used by Gamma and Epsilon” was chosen to be the official whistle.

Zeta Tau Alpha’s whistle is credited to its Kappa Chapter at the University of Texas. It was accepted by the 1908 convention. (Dr. May Agness Hopkins, a member of the Kappa Chapter was a member of Grand Chapter at that convention. You can read more about Dr. Hopkins at http://wp.me/p20I1i-pj).

A poem in the November 1920 Trident alluded to the existence of a Tri Delta Whistle.

HE WHISTLED THE TRI DELTA WHISTLE
It was during the Tri Delt Convention,
  Convened at the Statler Hotel,
When a certain young swain whom I mention,
  Saw a girl whom he liked very well.
He tried to attract her attention;
  He rushed through the lobby pell mell.
But the girl hurried on unobserving
  One girl in a chattering crowd
So he whistled the Tri Delta whistle;
   He whistled it clearly and loud,
And a hundred Tri Delts listened and heard,
And stopped in their progress deterred –
From every cranny and nook in the hall,
They whistled their answers to Tri Delta’s call –
When he whistled the Tri Delta whistle.

Indeed, the Centennial History of Delta Delta Delta noted, “There is little on the record about a whistle, but apparently it was used for a time. One whistle was similar to the call, using 1, 3, 5, 8 of the scale ascending. The answering whistle from a second person or group was the same but descending. The Trireme in 1915 reported that the convention adopted a recommendation ‘that the scale Delta Delta Delta whistle be used to the exclusion of all others.'”

In an article in the November 1944 Anchora, Charlotte Cline McConnehea, an alumna of Ohio’s Miami University Delta Gamma chapter, described the year she and her husband had working at a forest lookout tower in the Pacific northwest. Of the couple’s bird dog, Nimrod, she wrote “You should see him come a running to the Delta Gamma whistle!”

Other references to the whistle were found in the songbooks belonging to Gamma Phi Beta, Phi Mu and Kappa Alpha Theta.

The Whistle Song of Gamma Phi Beta

Phi Mu Whistle Song

The Whistle, Kappa Alpha Theta

This one page labelled “Fraternity Whistles” illustrates the whistles of both men’s and women’s organizations. My thanks to Chi Omega Archivist Lyn Harris for sharing it with me.

Assorted fraternity whistles (My thanks to Lyn Harris, Chi Omega’s Archivist for sharing this with me.)

I welcome the opportunity to make this post more complete. Please feel free to let me know about the whistles I am missing. These were just the resources I had at hand.

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© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2012. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Phi, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Kappa Alpha Theta, National Panhellenic Conference, Phi Mu, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Sigma Sigma, The Anchora of Delta Gamma, The Trident of Delta Delta Delta, Zeta Tau Alpha | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Whistle a Happy (Sorority) Tune……

It’s Mountain Day in South Hadley!

Mount Holyoke College was founded by Mary Lyon in 1837 and its Mountain Day tradition started a year later. The actual date of Mountain Day remains a mystery until 7 a.m. on the appointed day. The college bells ring for five minutes. Classes are cancelled and the library closes. In recent years, social media, including tweets and texts, has also spread the news. This year, it’s a late Mountain Day, October 17, but my guess, from my perch in the middle of the midwest, is that the leaves are in their colorful glory, it’s a crisp fall day, and the sky is a brilliant Tiffany blue.

Lynn Pasquerella, the college’s 18th President and a MHC alumna,  greets the students who trek to the top of Mount Holyoke. Ice cream awaits those who make the climb.

Smith College, another of the Seven Sister Colleges, also has a Mountain Day tradition. Smith’s first Mountain Day took place in 1877. Colby-Sawyer College in New London, New Hampshire, also has a Mountain Day tradition dating to the 1850s. In 1896, Juanita College in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania started its Mountain Day. Williams College, which began as an all-male institution, has nearby Mount Greylock and its Mountain Day has been celebrated since the 1900s.

 

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Happy Founders’ Day Zeta Tau Alpha and a Tidbit About Dr. May Agness Hopkins

Zeta Tau Alpha, one of the “Farmville Four,” was founded by nine young women, 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, on October 15, 1898. The organization began at the State Female Normal School, now Longwood University, in Farmville, Virginia.

One of the most influential of its early Grand Presidents was May Agness Hopkins who served from 1908-20 as the third Grand President. Only a few months out of college when she was elected as Grand Secretary, she served on Grand Chapter during the years she attended medical school, did a medical internship and residency, and enlisted as a war worker in France during the First World War.  ZTA joined the National Panhellenic Conference in 1909. “Dr. May,” as her ZTA sisters called her,  was the organization’s first NPC Delegate. She later served as NPC Chairman from 1923-26.

Dr. May Agness Hopkins

Hopkins was born in Austin, Texas on August 18, 1883. She graduated from the University of Texas in 1906, the same year the Kappa Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha was founded. May Bolinger (Orgain) was a member of ZTA’s Epsilon Chapter at the University of Arkansas. There were four other NPC groups at the University of Texas, but Bolinger wanted a ZTA chapter in Austin. A friend told her that if she could get May Hopkins to help, her efforts would be successful.  A lunch was arranged and by the end of lunch Hopkins had agreed to help organize a Zeta chapter, even though she was a senior. The installation of the chapter took place in Hopkins’ home. A month after graduation, Hopkins attended ZTA’s 1906 Knoxville convention. She left convention as Grand Secretary. In 1908, while attending medical school at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, she was elected Grand President.

In 1911, Hopkins received her medical degree; she was the lone woman in her graduating class. She completed an internship at Boston’s New England Hospital for Women and Children and a residency at Pennsylvania State Hospital. In 1912, she opened a pediatrics practice in Dallas.

During World War I, she offered her services and “her call came shortly before the 1918 Grand Chapter meeting and prevented her attendance there, but she sent her suggestions and recommendations, and while the meeting was in progress she was busily engaged in closing her office and making all preparations for going into – she knew not what.” She tendered her resignation as a Grand Chapter member, but it was not accepted; instead, she was granted a leave of absence.

Her response to the leave of absence was printed in the Themis, ZTA’s magazine, “To my sisters in Zeta Tau Alpha: When I received the resolution of my co-workers of Grand Chapter expressing their appreciation of my work, my heart simply filled to overflowing and I now am unable to find words with which to express my appreciation of your thoughtfulness. But I do wish you to know this: If I have been able to serve my fraternity with the least degree of efficiency; and through it to serve my sisters at large, it has only been through the untiring and loyal support you have given me as my co-officers and co-workers. It is true that our beloved fraternity has grown and through it I have grown – but you have been the power behind the throne. To you I give all the praise, all the honor. For myself, I can only say, ‘May I live to serve you and those I love again.'”

In lieu of the identification bracelet worn by all war workers, she wore a gold band bracelet with the Greek letters “ZTA.” It was a gift given to her by Omicron Chapter when it was installed in 1911 at Breanau University in Gainesville, Georgia. Her name was already engraved on the inside and she added her address to it. The bracelet, “was a bit of Zeta Tau Alpha that went with her through all her war-time experiences.”

Dr. May Agness Hopkins in uniform

Once she arrived in France, she was put to work. From July to September 1918, she was assigned to the Smith College unit of the Red Cross stationed at Château Thierry. While there she was given charge of evacuating wounded solders. After she left the front, she was given full jurisdiction of the “Southern Zone,” thirteen departments that bordered the Mediterranean Sea. She was the only woman doctor who served as a chief of a zone. She returned to America in 1919.

In 1920, after serving as Grand President for 12 years, Hopkins felt it necessary to resign the office. She called a Grand Chapter meeting in Dallas. She was named NPC delegate and remained a member of the Grand Chapter. The meeting took place over three days, and “many of the meetings were held in Dr. Hopkins’ car, the members driving with her while she made her calls.”

In 1927, she married Howard E. Reitzel. Hopkins remained an active member of  the medical community of Dallas. She practiced medicine until shortly before her death in 1972.

*All quotes are taken from The History of Zeta Tau Alpha 1898-1928 by Shirley Kreasnan Krieg.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2012. All rights reserved. If you enjoyed reading this post, subscribe to updates, or like it on facebook https://www.facebook.com/#!/groups/378663535503786/ or follow us on twitter @GLOhistory

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Happy Founders’ Day, Alpha Chi Omega!

Alpha Chi Omega’s  seven founders, Anna Allen, Olive Burnett, Bertha Deniston, Amy DuBois, Nellie Gamble, Bessie Grooms and Estelle Leonard, were students in the DePauw School of Music. With the guidance and support of James Hamilton Howe, Dean of the School of Music, they created an organization that at its beginning insisted that its members possess some musical culture. The group was organized on October 15, 1885.

The first appearance of Alpha Chi Omega was in Meharry Hall of East College. The seven women wore scarlet and olive ribbon streamers. The badge is in the shape of a Greek lyre.

Alpha Chi Omega has a long connection to the MacDowell Colony, the country’s oldest artist colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire. The Colony was founded in 1907 by Edward and Marian Nevins MacDowell; they created an environment to foster creative work. Mrs. MacDowell was an early member of Alpha Chi Omega’s Zeta Chapter at the New England Conservatory of Music.

Alpha Chi Omega funded the Star Studio which opened in 1911. The 1916 History of Alpha Chi Omega was written by Florence Armstrong in the Star Studio. More than 60 Pulitzer Prize winners have created work at the MacDowell Colony.

The Star Studio in the 1920s.

Star Studio, MacDowell Artist Colony

 

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Happy Founders’ Day Kappa Kappa Gamma!

Kappa Kappa Gamma’s headquarters at 530 East Town Street in Columbus, Ohio, the Snowden-Gray House, is likely the most unique of any NPC group (update – this is no longer Kappa’s HQ). Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded at Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois on October 13, 1870. Its six founding members walked into chapel wearing small golden keys in their hair. The Alpha chapter was disbanded by the mid 1870s when Monmouth College forbid the existence of fraternities, although there is evidence the some of the organizations maintained sub rosa chapters for several years. It is a testament to the strength of the organization that it, along with its Monmouth Duo partner, Pi Beta Phi, continued to grow and succeed despite the demise of the Alpha chapter a few years after the founding.

Kappa’s  headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, was  the home of Governor David Tod during the 1860s. In 1923, the Columbus Women’s Club purchased it to use as a headquarters. During the Depression, the club could no longer afford the upkeep and the building fell into private hands. It was used for offices, a candy making operation, and several other business until it fell into disrepair and was used as a poorly-kept rooming house.

Clara O. Pierce, an Ohio State Kappa, was appointed Kappa’s Executive Secretary in 1929 and served in that position for 40 years. It was her influence that brought the fraternity’s Central Office to a suite of offices in Columbus’ Ohio State Savings Building. In 1951, it was her vision that led the fraternity to purchase a large distressed, yet historic, mansion in what is now the Town-Franklin Historic District.

Three rooms serve as the Heritage Museum. Incorporated in 1981, the Heritage Museum was renovated and redecorated through the late 1990s. One of the first things that a visitor notices is the full length portrait of Tade Hartsuff Kuhns, a Butler University Kappa who served as the organization’s first Grand President (1881-84). Kuhns was a world traveler, and in 1930, the New York Sun named her one of the world’s most widely-traveled women. The portrait was painted by a Monmouth College Kappa, Elizabeth “Lizzie” Gowdy. Early in her career, as a young Monmouth College faculty member, Gowdy was forced to resign from her position because she was seen wearing her Kappa key at a time when the organizations were banned from  campus.*

Kappa’s First Grand President    Tade Hartsuff Kuhns

 

* For more information about the May 1882 dismissal of Lizzie Gowdy, art instructor visit Richard Sayres’ blog entry at http://heweslibrary.blogspot.com/2011/01/may-1882-dismissal-of-miss-lizzie-gowdy.html

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2012. All Rights Reserved.

Posted in Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, GLO, Greek-letter Organization, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Monmouth College, National Panhellenic Conference, Notable Sorority Women | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Bess Truman, First Lady, and P.E.O.

As the wife of a Missouri Senator, Elizabeth “Bess” Truman became a member of Chapter S of the P.E.O. Sisterhood, District of Columbia. The chapter was organized on January 29, 1941 and was known as the Missouri Chapter; all of its charter members were from the Show Me State. The chapter was sponsored by Chapter CW, Kirksville, Missouri. Mrs. Truman was the chapter’s first Vice President. Chapter members hailed from Missouri towns including Kirksville, Kansas City, Macon, Cape Girardeau, St. Joseph, Richmond, Shelbyville and Independence. P.E.O. is a Philanthropic Educational Organization that was founded in 1869 at Iowa Wesleyan College  in Mount Pleasant, Iowa.

As wife of the Vice-President Mrs. Truman, along with Mrs. Wiley Rutledge, the wife of the Supreme Court Associate Justice, were guests at a tea given by the P.E.O. Sisterhood of the District of Columbia and the P.E.O. Round Table. It was held at the Woman’s City Club on Sunday afternoon, March 4, 1945. The tea was arranged to greet unaffiliated P.E.O.s. More than 325 P.E.O.s attended, 110 of whom were not affiliated with a local chapter. Many of the unaffiliates in attendance were WACs or WAVES in uniform, and it was said that they greatly appreciated the opportunity to meet the local P.E.O.s. A musical program was part of the afternoon’s entertainment.

On November 13, 1946, Mrs. Truman was the guest of honor at a reception in the Hotel Statler’s Congressional Room. More than 500 P.E.O.s attended. Dorothy Lee Weller, President of Supreme Chapter, was to to be in attendance, but a sudden illness kept her away. Bessie R. Raney, First Vice President of Supreme Chapter, attended in her stead. In attendance at the tea were fourteen unaffiliates who would soon form Chapter W, the 23rd chapter in Washington, D.C.

An article in the May 1948 P.E.O. Record noted that Chapter S was entertained by Mrs. Truman at the White House. The meeting took place in Mrs. Truman’s sitting room. After the meeting, the group adjourned to the President’s projection room where a film about Venezuela was shown. The program  was part of the chapter’s year-long study of South America. That year, the Trumans attended the chapter’s annual B.I.L. dinner, “Following dinner President and Mrs. Truman entered into the singing and games with zest, as did all present.”

A White House garden party took place on the afternoon of May 24, 1948. Seven hundred District of Columbia P.E.O.s attended. Mrs. Truman, “gowned in a lovely floor-length afternoon frock of grey and white print, graciously greeted the members as they passed down the receiving line, and later mingled with the guests.”

Other articles mentioned that Mrs. Truman also entertained her P.E.O. sisters at Blair House and on the presidential yacht. Mrs. Truman remained a member of Chapter S her entire life.

An article in a June 1950 Prescott Evening Courier gave this assessment of the First Lady, “one feels she still hankers to do her own housework, still prefers meetings of her P.E.O. Sisterhood, a secret nationwide women’s philanthropic and educational organization, to White House functions and state dinners, and still looks forward to the day when she can shop again for her own groceries back in Independence.”

The President and First Lady met as schoolchildren and were in the same 1901 graduating high school class at Independence High School. After high school, she studied language and literature at Miss Barstow’s Finishing School for Girls in Kansas City, Missouri. Upon her return to Independence, she helped her widowed mother run the household. On June 28, 1919, she married Harry S. Truman at Trinity Episcopal Church. The bridegroom had served in the Army and had been discharged several weeks before the wedding. Mary Margaret, born on February 17, 1924, was the couple’s only child. When Margaret, as she was then known, entered George Washington University, she became a member of Pi Beta Phi. Mrs. Truman became an active member of the chapter’s Mother’s Club (a story saved for another day).

Mrs. Truman passed away on October 18, 1982 at the age of 97. She has the distinction of being the First Lady who lived the longest life.

 

My thanks to Joyce Perkins at P.E.O. International Headquarters for her assistance in locating information about Mrs. Truman.

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Happy Founders’ Day Alpha Phi, the Oldest of the Syracuse Triad!

Alpha Phi is the oldest of the Syracuse Triad, the three women’s National Panhellenic Conference organizations – Alpha Phi, Gamma Phi Beta and Alpha Gamma Delta –  founded at Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York.  In 1871, a chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon, a men’s fraternity founded at Yale University in 1844, established a chapter at Syracuse University.  In September of 1872,  Martha Foote [Crowe], Clara Sittser [Williams] and Kate Hogoboom [Gilbert] discussed  the situation (Thomson, 1943).

Foote led the charge and pondered, with her friends, the thought of women  having fraternal organizations comparable to the ones the men enjoyed.  They  invited all the college women to discuss the possibility (Thomson, 1943).

In September 1872, 10 women – the original three and Jane Higham, Clara Bradley [Burdette], Louise Shepherd [Hancock], Florence Chidester [Lukens], Ida Gilbert [Houghton], Elizabeth Grace [Hubbell], and Rena  Michaels [Atchinson] met and pledged allegiance to the sisterhood.  Minutes from the first meeting noted that Michaels was chosen president, plans were  made for weekly meetings at which literary exercises would be part of the  program, and a 25¢ tax was levied for the purchase of a secretary’s book.  The  first debate was “Resolved – that women have their rights” (Alpha Phi  Fraternity, 1931, p. 132).

Years later Clara Sittser Williams shared her recollection of that first meeting with the readership of the fraternity’s magazine:  “The first meeting was held in my room in the house which is now 303 Irving Avenue.  My mother had sent me some chicken, grapes and so forth.  Kate Hogoboom Gilbert and I invited some of the college girls to share our feast.  Mattie Foote was one of the first who came in, and she told us about the literary societies of Cazenovia Seminary, where she had recently graduated, said she had been talking with Clara Bradley and proposed that we start one here.  Kate Hogoboom was very enthusiastic over it, said some of her gentlemen friends were loyal members of secret societies, and if women were to have the same position in college as men, we must organize one; so the subject was presented to the girls that night.  We thought it would be a fine idea socially to form a circle of sympathetic friends whom we would know personally.  We had as our aim the mutual improvement of each other, every trying to do our best in college work, always keeping a high ideal before us, never under any circumstances to speak disparagingly of a sister.  We were to be very loyal to one another, in joys and sorrows, success or failures, and ever extend a helping hand to our sisters who need our aid. “ (Williams, 1913, p. 145)

Gilbert later said of the founding:  “None of us, at that time, knew of the existence of any such organization, but supposed ourselves, with pardonable conceit, to be the only and original national college women’s society” (Alpha Phi Fraternity, 1931, p. 133).

At first the chapter met in the homes of chapter members.  Dr. Chidester, Florence’s father, allowed the use of his Irving Avenue home office on Monday evenings.  In 1873, the meetings were changed to Friday night (Thomson, 1943).

During the summer following the founding, Foote and Bradley, both of whom had stayed in Syracuse, surprised the chapter upon the start of the school year in the fall: “There was no money, but “Ma” Bradley was a constant source of help and loaned the necessary funds to rent a vacant room over a furniture store down town.  A broken cot was patched and painted, an altar was constructed from an old packing case, draped with blue velveteen and decorated with the letters Alpha Phi in gold dress braid, and with the addition of a few old chairs the room was furnished.  Blue curtains, trimmed with more gold braid decorated the windows and the two energetic girls waited eagerly the surprise and joy of their friends.  The enthusiasm was somewhat dampened by the chapter’s horror of the dreadful debt incurred but the charm of sneaking to the room, the dark stairway lighted only by tallow candles, and the privilege of sitting on the floor during meeting soon overcame their scruples and Alpha Phi continued to enjoy her first secret home.” (Alpha Phi Fraternity, 1931, p. xxi)

The first chapter room was on Salina Street, over Sager and Grave’s carpet store, and the carpet and curtains were in blue and gold, the fraternity’s colors at the time.* The chapter room remained there for six years until it was moved to a suite of rooms on the fourth floor of the Onondaga County Savings Bank Building (Thomson, 1943).

Dr. Wellesley P. Coddington, a Professor of Greek and Philosophy, was, for many years, Alpha Phi’s advisor.  He encouraged the chapter to incorporate and having rented a room and acquired some property to furnish the rooms, the chapter felt it a commendable idea.  A New York State Law passed on April 12, 1848, while precluding the incorporation of a Greek-letter society permitted the incorporation under the formation of “Benevolent, Literary, Scientific, and Missionary Societies.”  The chapter made application under the name “Michaelanean Society” in honor of its president, Rena Michaels.  The document was issued to the five members who were of legal age to hold property, Mary F.  Cary, Julia Louise Gage, Elizabeth Grace Hubbell, Alice M.  Lee, and Lizzie C.  Peebles (Thomson, 1943, p. 137).  Due to the small number of members of legal signing age, for the first year Coddington signed his name as director of the society.  The certificate was filed on June 9, 1873.  The Alpha Chapter House Board still retains the name of the Michaelanean Society (Jones, 1992).

Coddington** was so esteemed by the chapter that it was  “proposed that his name be cheered at every meeting for five years” (Alpha Phi Fraternity, 1931, p. 23).  However, in lieu of yelling, the chapter instead purchased a piece of furniture for his study. Coddington also had a hand in the fraternity’s public motto, he aided in the formation of its constitution and by-laws, he later encouraged the chapter to rent and then build a chapter house, and he introduced the chapter to one of its most famous and honored initiates, Frances Elizabeth Willard (Thomson, 1943).

Willard, a graduate of the Northwestern Female College in Evanston, Illinois, earned a M.A. degree at Syracuse.  On October 15, 1875, a Women’s Congress was held in Syracuse.  Coddington introduced the Alpha Phis to Willard and they were so taken by this female leader who was corresponding secretary of the newly formed Women’s National Christian Temperance Union, that they asked her to be a member of their fraternity (Thomson, 1943).  Willard went on to serve as Alpha Phi’s National President in 1888-89.  However, she was unable to preside at the 1889 Boston Convention as “a crusade kept her in England” (Alpha Phi Fraternity, 1931, p. 8).

For nine years the Alpha chapter stood alone until “she sought out as Beta chapter, seven girls at Northwestern, who had cemented already, their friendship. . . by wearing uniform rings” (McElroy, 1913, p. 141).  The motto “Toujours Fidele” was inscribed on their rings.  Minnie Moulding, Claire Lattin and Adele Maltbie were the nucleus of the group.  As sophomores, upon return to campus, they sought an organization similar to the men’s fraternities then at Northwestern.  The three consulted their Dean, Jean Bancroft [Robinson], an alumna of the Syracuse Alpha Phi chapter.  Bancroft encouraged them to enlarge their circle and they asked four other female students to wear their rings, seniors Emma Meserve and Jennie Marshall, and sophomores Lizzie Hill and Eva Lane.  Three members of the Syracuse chapter visited Evanston upon Bancroft’s invitation and before the three left Evanston, the Beta chapter of Alpha Phi had been installed (Alpha Phi Fraternity, 1931).  The installation took place on June 6, 1881, at Meserve’s home on the corner of Orrington Avenue and Clark Street across from Willard Hall.

*Alpha Phi’s colors were later changed to silver gray and bordeaux.
**After the turn of the century, Coddington played an integral role in the founding of the last of the Syracuse triad, Alpha Gamma Delta.

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From – Coeducation and the History of Women’s Fraternities 1867-1902, by Frances DeSimone Becque, Dissertation, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, 2002, pp. 58-63.  All rights reserved. The Bibliography will soon be available as a separate post.

 

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Happy 107th Anniversary to President and Mrs. Coolidge

At 2:30 p.m. on October 4, 1905 in in the parlor of the home of Andrew and Lemira Goodhue, with 25 friends and relatives in attendance, the Goodhue’s daughter Grace married Calvin Coolidge, a young lawyer. The bride wore a simple pearl gray silk dress with a train.

The home at 312 Maple Street was also the place where the Vermont Beta Chapter of Pi Beta Phi was installed on Thanksgiving, November 24, 1898. Grace Goodhue was a charter member of the chapter and served as Recording Secretary.

The Goodhue home in which Grace and Calvin Coolidge were married. It is now a part of Champlain College in Burlington, Vermont.

Grace and Calvin were both native Vermonters, but were working and living in Northampton, Massachusetts. After graduating from the University of Vermont, Grace Goodhue moved to Northampton, Massachusetts, to study and work at the Clarke School for the Deaf.  Calvin was an alumnus of Amherst College where he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta.

The couple met while Grace was living and teaching at the Clarke School. She lived in Baker Hall on the school’s campus. Calvin Coolidge, 32 years old with his own law firm, lived in an apartment across the street. Legend has it that she saw the man shaving as she was watering flowers outside his window. He had on a cap and upon seeing the figure in the cap shaving she laughed but carried on watering the flowers.

The couple honeymooned in Montreal. Grace Coolidge ceased her employment and she and her husband began a family. Two sons, John and Calvin, Jr., kept her busy. The Coolidge family lived in one side of a rented duplex at 21 Massasoit Street in Northampton. Her husband soon became Northampton’s mayor.

According to Grace Coolidge biographer, Cyndy Bittinger, “Grace Coolidge was an important balance to her husband. He was known for being shy and quiet, yet he chose a political career to please his father. He forced himself to reach out and meet strangers even though it was always hard for him. When he met Grace Goodhue in 1904, he found a soul mate to soothe him, as well as someone who could make others comfortable in social settings.”

They shared a little more than 27 years of marriage when the former President passed away on January 5, 1933, two days after his wife’s 54th birthday..

Photos courtesy of Marilyn Stevens Smith, a fellow New York Alpha Pi Beta Phi. Marilyn is a very talented artist (I have a collection of her handmade Christmas cards). I am so very glad she chose to be a Pi Beta Phi and I thank her for sending me these pictures earlier this week as she was touring Burlington.

Posted in Amherst College, Calvin Coolidge, Fran Favorite, Greek-letter Organization, Phi Gamma Delta, Pi Beta Phi, University of Vermont | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Happy 107th Anniversary to President and Mrs. Coolidge