#StandUpToHarvard and Its Hypocrisy

On December 3, 2018, lawsuits by sororities, fraternities and students were filed in federal and Massachusetts court challenging Harvard University’s sanction policy which punishes students belonging to off-campus, single-sex social organizations. The 26 National Panhellenic Conference sororities and the 66 North-American Interfraternity Conference fraternities threw their support behind those who have taken a stand against this policy. It was an impressive show of force yesterday as social media exploded and #standuptoharvard was a trending topic on twitter. Visit www.standuptoharvard.org to sign a petition and to #standuptoharvard.

My original May 13, 2016 post – Hypocrisy Thy Name Is Harvard

Harvard University has deemed that any student in the class of 2021, the incoming crop of its freshmen, who joins a single-gender organization will be considered a pariah and will not be allowed to captain a single-sex sports team or be eligible for college endorsement for selective fellowships. Okay, the official edict did not mention the word pariah, but that seems to be the intention.

This is also not the first time that Harvard has banned Greek-letter organizations. Alpha Delta Phi was the first fraternity at Harvard when it chartered a chapter in 1837. Other fraternities followed. The fraternities were forced to close in the late 1890s/early 1900s and from the rubble of the closing of those organizations, final clubs were created.  The single-gender final clubs are one of the targets of this latest edict.

Harvard is the oldest of the Colonial Colleges which predate the establishment of the United States. It’s the same Harvard that created a coordinate institution, Radcliffe College, to educate women separately from men. Since the 1970s, Harvard has been coeducational.

This latest policy was announced by Harvard University President Drew Gilpin Faust, the first female to hold that position. Her undergraduate degree was obtained at Bryn Mawr, a women’s college and one of the Seven Sister colleges. Mary Maples Dunn, one of Faust’s professors at Bryn Mawr who later went on to serve as President of Smith College, was quoted in a February 12, 2007 New York Times article about Faust’s appointment as Harvard University President. In the article, Dunn said of Faust’s experience at Bryn Mawr, “I think these women’s institutions in those days tended to give these young women a very good sense of themselves and encouraged them to develop their own ideas and to express themselves confidently….It was an invaluable experience in a world in which women were second-class citizens.” 

I believe women’s fraternities/sororities also “give young women a very good sense of themselves and encourage them to develop their own ideas and to express themselves confidently.” Kappa Alpha Theta was the first National Panhellenic Conference organization to establish a chapter at Harvard, although if you look at Theta’s website, the location of its Zeta Xi Chapter is not shared; in its place is ~. Theta, along with the three other NPC groups which followed, is not recognized by the institution. In placing the chapter there, Theta seems to have given its word to never mention the institution in which the members of the Zeta Xi Chapter are enrolled. Delta Gamma’s chapter was chartered in 1994. Kappa Kappa Gamma joined them in 2003. Alpha Phi chartered a chapter in 2013 as the number of women who chose to go through recruitment warranted the establishment of another chapter. Remember, this is on a campus where the groups do not have access to any rooms and cannot put posters up about their events. The local Panhellenic is called the Cambridge-Area Panhellenic Council because the group cannot use Harvard in its name. Quota this year was 51, with chapter total at 155. These are fairly impressive numbers for a campus where the organizations are not recognized and cannot do much in the way of publicity.

I find it odd that one of the most exclusive of universities is suddenly concerned about being equitable. The class of entering freshmen, the first to be subjected to this edict, had a 5.2% acceptance rate. Of the more than 39,000 applicants, only 2,037 were admitted. And yet, Harvard is denouncing “exclusivity.” I have an idea, Harvard. Take the first 2,000 students who apply, no matter their GPAs, extracurriculars, essays, etc. Just take them as they come in. Or better yet, distribute “golden tickets” a la Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. After all, it’s the fair thing to do. I suspect that many of the 37,000 high school seniors who received the “thanks, but no thanks” letter were devastated about that decision. It’s just not fair that some students are accepted to your university and others are not. Open Harvard up to everyone; it’s the equitable thing to do.

Using campus safety as a reason to enact this edict is also disingenuous. A big elephant in the room is that alcohol and drug use/abuse tend to impair judgement. Forcing the organizations to accept members of the opposite sex, and eliminating single-gender organizations, without addressing the bigger problem of impaired judgement is not going to solve anything. When one is not sober, uncharacteristic and awful things can happen. Inhibitions are lessened and stupid decisions are sometimes made. “Work hard, party harder” is a rallying cry for many of today’s students. How about working on that problem first?

When Bettie Locke, the first female student to enroll at Indiana Asbury University, was offered a Phi Gamma Delta badge, she declined. Instead, she started an organization of her own. Four of the women in that first class of women started Kappa Alpha Theta. The fifth one started a chapter of I.C. Sorosis/Pi Beta Phi. Since 1870, Kappa Alpha Theta has provided women with the opportunity to hone leadership skills, establish life-long friendships, and to live up to the highest ideals of womanhood. These ideals are not exclusive to Kappa Alpha Theta; the other 25 NPC groups also strive for the same goals.

Delta Gamma was started in 1873 by three young students in Oxford, Mississippi, who could not get home for the Christmas holiday. Its growth to the northern states was through the efforts of a man, George Banta, a Phi Delta Theta, who is the only initiated male member of Delta Gamma. Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded in 1870 at Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois. Kappa, along with its Monmouth Duo partner, Pi Beta Phi, was able to withstand the closure of its Alpha Chapter when Monmouth College authorities forced the groups to disband in the late 1870s. Alpha Phi was founded in 1872 at Syracuse University. One of its early National Presidents was suffragist and social reformer Frances Willard. Women formed and nurtured these organizations and their single-sex nature is deliberate and purposeful.

While the life of today’s woman is light years away from the lives led by the founders of these NPC organizations, the tenets on which the organizations were built are as real today as they were in the late 1800s. I, for one, think Harvard needs to rethink this edict about single-gender organizations. Forcing all-male and all-female organizations to accept members of the opposite sex merely to prove a misguided point will prove no point in the end.

Screenshot (77)

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Meetings, Milestones, and More

The annual meeting of the Association of Fraternity/Sorority Advisors (AFA), which was held in Indianapolis, wrapped up this weekend. Hazing took center stage when parents who have lost sons to fraternity hazing shared their stories with the attendees. I applaud these brave parents for their courage and strength.

In the 1970s, after her son Chuck Stenzel died due to hazing by a local fraternity at Alfred University, Eileen Stevens started the Committee to Halt Useless College Killings (C.H.U.C.K.). In those 40 years, there has been at least one hazing death per year and sometimes more than that. It truly is time to halt hazing.

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Fraternity men are working hard around the globe.

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Milestone celebrations are taking place. Congratulations Coach Stringer and Sigma Nu!

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Greeks Against the Grinch! is a terrific title for a toy drive. Kudos and best wishes for a successful event.

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In the “you learn something new” department, here are two facts I did not know. Guess there will be a cemetery tour on my next trip to Lawrence.

 

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My heart is touched whenever I see Sigma Chi’s “all honor to his name,” in speaking about deceased members. Condolences on the loss of Bob McNair.

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George H. W. Bush, R.I.P.

George Herbert Walker Bush, our 41st President, died yesterday at the age of 94. His wife, Barbara Bush, died this past April.

Mr. and Mrs. George Herbert Walker Bush, 1945.

President Bush became a member of the Delta Kappa Epsilon chapter while he was a student at Yale University.

A 2013 DKE post featuring DKE socks which were sent to the sock loving President.

In 2000, the Bushes traveled to Monmouth, Illinois, where the former President delivered the commencement speech. Jeff Rankin, Monmouth College’s historian, wrote about the visit.

Monmouth College is the founding campus of two of the seven National Panhellenic Conference organizations. Pi Beta Phi was founded there in 1867 and Kappa Kappa Gamma followed in 1870. The two are known as the Monmouth Duo. Mrs. Bush was not yet a Pi Phi when she visited the Monmouth campus, but she became an alumna initiate a few years later.

This photo of the Bushes and the gift basket they received in 2000 is on display at Holt House, the founding home of Pi Beta Phi.

My heartfelt sympathy to the Bush family for their loss. 

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U.S. Presidents and Fraternity Men – First Ladies and Sorority Women

Ever wonder which Presidents belonged to fraternities? Or which First Ladies were in women’s fraternities/sororities? Or which Presidential offspring belong to these organizations? 

National Panhellenic Conference women who have served as First Lady

Lucy B. Hayes, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Ohio Wesleyan College, Honorary member

Grace Goodhue Coolidge, Pi Beta Phi, University of Vermont, charter member 

Lou Henry Hoover, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Stanford University

Barbara Pierce Bush, Pi Beta Phi, Texas A&M, Alumna initiate (post-White House years)

Laura Welch Bush, Kappa Alpha Theta, Southern Methodist University

 

Grace Coolidge in her official First Lady portrait, wearing her Pi Phi arrow.

National Pan-Hellenic Council women who have served as First Lady

Eleanor Roosevelt, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Honorary member

 

Fraternity men who have served as President of the United States 

Thomas Jefferson, Flat Hat Club (F.H.C. Society), College of William and Mary*

Rutherford B. Hayes, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Honorary member

James Garfield, Delta Upsilon, Williams College

Chester Arthur, Psi Upsilon, Union College

Grover Cleveland, Sigma Chi, Honorary member

Benjamin Harrison, Phi Delta Theta, Miami University and Delta Chi, University of Michigan

William McKinley, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Mount Union College

Theodore Roosevelt, Delta Kappa Epsilon and Alpha Delta Phi, Harvard University

William Howard Taft, Psi Upsilon, Yale University

Woodrow Wilson, Phi Kappa Psi, University of Virginia

Calvin Coolidge, Phi Gamma Delta, Amherst College

Franklin D. Roosevelt, Alpha Delta Phi, Harvard University**

Harry S Truman, Lambda Chi Alpha and Alpha Delta Gamma, Honorary member

Dwight D. Eisenhower, Tau Epsilon Phi, Honorary member

John F. Kennedy, Phi Kappa Theta, Honorary member

Gerald R. Ford, Delta Kappa Epsilon, University of Michigan

Ronald Reagan, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Eureka College

George H.W. Bush, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Yale University

Bill Clinton, Phi Beta Sigma, Honorary member***

George W. Bush, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Yale University

The list of Vice Presidents who are fraternity men 

You probably made your way to this page because you saw tweet with this random, and thoroughly incorrect, statement  “Every U.S. President and Vice President, except two in each office, born since the first social fraternity was founded in 1825, have been members of a fraternity.”

To be fair, there may have been a grain of truth in that statistic at one time. Rutherford B. Hayes, born in 1822, was initiated as an honorary member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. Every President from Hayes through Calvin Coolidge, a Phi Gamma Delta initiated as a student at Amherst College, belonged to a Greek-letter organization either as a collegiate member or an honorary member. Herbert Hoover was the first to break that long streak.  The next to break it was Lyndon Johnson. Up until this point, the statement would have been true. Unfortunately, after Johnson, the statistic becomes not so true. Neither Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, or Barack Obama belonged to Greek-letter organizations. Current President Donald Trump is not a fraternity man.

While I would love it if the above statement was true, the fact is that it is not. I suspect someone saw it on something written in the 1960s when it was true and used it in a poster or webpage. It then spread like wildfire. It appears on countless websites as a given fact. Don’t believe me? Do a quick search and you will get pages and pages of results. 

It is my opinion that we – those of us who advocate for and believe in the fraternity system when it works as it was meant to – shoot ourselves in the foot when we spout clearly false information simply because we assume that it is true, because it once was true, and/or because we want it to be true. If you have connections to one of the web-sites that is using that “all but two” information, please bring it to the webmaster’s attention. It hasn’t been true since the late 1960s. It’s also a good example of that old adage about a falsehood traveling around the world before the truth has a chance to tie its shoelaces. And as my Pi Phi friend Ashley Dye said, “the real stats are impressive enough.”

The postcard reads

Random Notes

Grace Goodhue Coolidge, a charter member of the Vermont Beta chapter of Pi Beta Phi at the University of Vermont, was the first wife of a President to have been initiated in a women’s fraternity while in college. Her husband became an initiated member of Phi Gamma Delta while a student at Amherst College. Together the Coolidges were the first couple initiated into Greek-letter societies during their college years.

Phi Gamma Delta has President Coolidge’s badge and during the fraternity’s 164th Ekkelsia, it was presented to the Archon President to wear. Pi Beta Phi has Mrs. Coolidge’s badges and there is one in the Smithsonian’s collection.

Mrs. Coolidge was not the first First Lady to be a member of a National Panhellenic Conference organization. That honor goes to Lucy Webb Hayes, wife of Rutherford B. Hayes. On December 1, 1880, she accepted the invitation of the Rho Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma at Ohio Wesleyan College to become an honorary member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Her husband was an honorary member of Delta Kappa Epsilon and the first fraternity man to be President.

Mrs. Coolidge’s successor, Lou Henry Hoover, was also a Kappa Kappa Gamma. She became a member when she was a  Stanford University student.

Laura Welch Bush is a Kappa Alpha Theta, having been initiated while a student at Southern Methodist University. Her husband, George W. Bush, is a member of Yale University chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon. Together they are the second couple initiated into Greek-letter organizations while college students. Another interesting note is that Lynne Ann Vincent Cheney, wife of President Bush’s Vice President, is also a Kappa Alpha Theta. She was initiated into the Colorado College chapter.

In her post-White House years, Barbara Pierce Bush, who had attended Smith College, became an alumna initiate of Pi Beta Phi. Her chapter of initiation is Texas Eta at Texas A&M University. Her husband, George Herbert Walker Bush, is also a member of the Yale University Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon. His Vice President, Dan Quayle, is also a Delta Kappa Epsilon member. He was initiated into the DePauw University chapter.

* The Flat Hat Club was founded at the College of William and Mary in 1750.  It is believed to be the precursor of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, which was established at the same institution in 1776. The modern F.H.C. Society was revived at the College of William and Mary in May, 1972. The Flat Hat is also the name of the college’s student newspaper.

** Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon at Harvard University, also known as the “Dickey Club.” However, the national organization did not recognize the chapter because of the chapter’s stance on dual membership.

*** Bill Clinton became a member of Phi Beta Sigma in 2009, in his post White House years. He became a member of Alpha Phi Omega, a now co-ed service fraternity while at Georgetown University. It was an all-male fraternity when he joined as a college student.


 

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2018. All Rights Reserved. If you enjoyed this post, please subscribe above. Also follow on twitter and instagram @GLOHistory, Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory, and Facebook.

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Here’s to Convention Name Tags!

I was in awe of this name tag which was posted on Facebook by the Archives of Phi Gamma Delta. It is in excellent condition for being almost a century old. The purple ribbon appears flawless!

This type of circa early 1900s name tag which featured a ribbon attached to a metal frame with a pin back usually do not look this good. The ribbon is often in various stages of deterioration. The “Victory” on the bottom almost certainly refers to the victory of World War I. The war was not over in October of 1917, when a P.E.O. wore the name tag below at a Supreme Convention, but the flag, no doubt, showed support for the war effort.

I would love to put together a post about convention name tags, but I need some help from my readers. Please send photos of convention badges of yore and I will do my best to write a post about the evolution of convention badges.

This was just sent to me. It’s another purple ribbon in excellent shape!

Meanwhile, here are some photos of name tags that are in my dropbox.

A name tag from the 1977 Alpha Gamma Delta convention.

And here’s a throwback to a more recent convention with the name tag and ribbons like many of us have worn. And yes, that is Mary Tatum, a former Grand President of Pi Beta Phi, on the right.

 

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Phi Sigma Sigma’s WWII Clubmobile on Founders’ Day

Phi Sigma Sigma was founded at Hunter College on November 26, 1913 as Phi Sigma Omega. When it was discovered that the name was already in use, it became Phi Sigma Sigma. Its 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.

In the 1940s, during World War II, Phi Sigma Sigma began a fundraiding drive. Its goal was to provide a Red Cross Clubmobile as a way to assist the men who were fighting on the front lines.  The Clubmobiles supplied coffee and donuts to the soldiers who were in isolated and remote areas. Women drove the Clubmobiles which looked somewhat like today’s recreational vehicles. It was reported that the women who drove and staffed  the Clubmobiles made and served 20,000 donuts per day. The Phi Sigma Sigma Clubmobile was assigned to follow troops in the North African  invasion.

The check covering the cost of the Phi Sigma Sigma Clubmobile was presented to the American Red Cross on February 20, 1944. The event took place at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Forty-five collegians, alumnae and national officers attended. Luncheon chairman Kitty Bralow, who had served as National Philanthropy Secretary, led the War Project. Clarisse H. Markowitz, Grand Archon, spoke about Phi Sig’s philanthropic purposes. She told how grateful she was that the War Project had come to fruition.

Later that day, out of town guests were treated to a buffet supper at the Xi chapter house at Temple University.

 

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#HappyThanksgiving2018

It’s Thanksgiving and it’s a good time to give thanks. To those who read this blog on a regular basis, I offer my heartfelt gratitude. And to those who tell others about it, thank you twice. I appreciate those who forward me interesting information, and who answer my questions.

Last month I was surprised by an unexpected call from a Delta Gamma friend. She wanted to congratulate me on being named as a recipient of the Delta Gamma Compass Award. It is given to a non-member of Delta Gamma Fraternity who, “through his/her extraordinary leadership and service, has made a lasting and deeply significant contribution to the Fraternity and/or the interfraternal movement.” I was floored to say the least, but oh so very grateful. Thank you Delta Gamma!

I am not at home and I haven’t been since early October. Save for a 48 hour trip to Massachusetts for a family wedding, I’ve been in Florida with my father, who is recovering from surgery. 

I try to write posts, but my mind is scattered and my spare time is limited. I’m not sleeping well and  in the wee small hours this morning I became lost in a new-to-me blog about a San Diego couple who moved with their family to a small Indiana town. They live in a nearly century old Masonic Temple building. They are turning it into a home and possibly a business. It is fascinating. As I was reading the posts, something caught my eye. It was a newspaper the owners found in their library room and it was from the city where I have been since early October. More proof that we are all connected!

Happy Thanksgiving friends!

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Tri Delta – Founded on Thanksgiving Eve

Delta Delta Delta was founded at Boston University on November 28, 1888, which fell on the day before Thanksgiving that year. In the fall of 1888, four senior women, who had not joined any of the three women’s fraternities then at Boston University discussed their situation. Eleanor Dorcas Pond ([Mann, M.D.) talked to Sarah Ida Shaw (Martin) 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.

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.”

Shaw and Pond were 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 friends. The four are considered founders. Soon they were joined by three juniors, five sophomores, and six freshmen. These women were initiated at the Joy Street home of Emily F. Allen on January 15, 1889.

In 1889, Tri Delta’s Epsilon chapter became the second women’s fraternity at Knox College. Kappa Beta Theta was a local organization founded in 1888 by sisters Patsie and Ola Ingersoll.  Beta Theta Pi had a chapter at Knox College and a Knox Beta told his brother, who was a member of the Beta Theta Pi chapter at Boston University. The Boston University Beta gave the information to his friend, Delta Delta Delta founder Sarah Ida Shaw.  Shaw began correspondence with the Knox College women.  A Tri Delta charter was granted on July 9, 1889.  A member of the Simpson College chapter, Hattie Berry, initiated the chapter in August 1889, at the home of one of the charter members, Alta March.  A reception was held at the Phi Gamma Delta Hall at Knox College. One of the early initiates of the Knox chapter was Rachel Louise Fitch, known to Tri Deltas as R. Louise Fitch, or more lovingly, “Our Louise Fitch.”

Fitch, a woman well ahead of her time, won honors as a student at Knox, she served Tri Delta in many capacities, including Grand President. She was a career woman, too. My Tri Delta friend, Beth Applebaum, wrote a guest post about her for Women’s History Month 2017.

During World War I, she traveled to Europe and worked for the YWCA in France, collecting stories about the French women and their war efforts, which resulted in the book, Madame France.

She kept her Tri Delta sisters informed about her war work and her letters were published in The Trident. In a letter identified as her last from France, she talks about the first European Tri Delta convention:

I was over in eastern France and had a sudden opportunity to ride with the mail man to the hospital center where Tilley Willey, Alpha Xi, Frances Hammond, Delta Gamma and Ruth Bridge, Delta Beta, are stationed. I grasped this opportunity with both hands and hung on tight until I got there. Ruth was on night duty so I went over to see if Tilley Willey was still at her hospital. I was led to her barrack room and the yip of joy when she saw me was worth a long journey. She was tired and sort of jaded the world temporarily, being encumbered with a lusty cold, and was lying down when I arrived. But there was no more gloom in her vicinity for some time thereafter. Work was light then, as they were evacuating, and her ‘boss’ suggested that she take a day off, which suggestion was eagerly adopted. We had a great visit and I listened with much interest to the story of her work. Her first job after she arrived had been to nurse German prisoners near the front for a couple of weeks. She said she did not mind it much until they kept calling her Kamarad when they wanted something. She stood it for a few times and then told them in firm and decided tones that ‘she was not their kamarad, thank the Lord, and never would be and if they ever called her that again she would do nothing whatever for them. They could call her nurse if they wished, but kamarad, NEVER.’

 

She and her three friends went on a picnic and ate “real U.S. food such as I had not seen in some months – white-bread sandwiches, stuffed eggs, fried bacon, etc.” She spent the night a Ruth Bridge’s hospital and where Bridge told her about spending ten weeks with an operating unit on the front lines. Fitch wrote, “Ruth’s story of the work of the unit makes you gasp with admiration, both for the work and for the marvelous spirit of our wounded.”

Fitch was elected national president in 1915 and so when she had a chance to meet with her NPC friend, Dr. May Agness Hopkins, national president of Zeta Tau Alpha, in France she took it. They had two weeks in the same place. She said:

We had all kinds of visits and trips together and discussed all phases of sorority life and conditions and had one good time. Dr. Hopkins­ had a most interesting experience, which I hope will be written up for her own magazine. If no one else sends it in, I think I shall have to, for it is surely corking. She was asked to take a canal boat of wounded down the canal from Chateau-Thierry to Paris – which she did with all kinds of embellishments. It is really great. I will tell you about it when I see you. She is now in Marseilles with the Children’s Bureau of the Red Cross.

 

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A Glimpse at Syracuse’s Fraternity and Sorority Houses

@syracusehistory is one of my favorite instagram accounts. Here’s a recent post about Alpha Epsilon Phi’s chapter house.

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The first fraternity at Syracuse University, the Phi Gamma chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon was chartered on November 17, 1871. It was one of the first chapters to have a chapter house at Syracuse. In the late 1890s, a chapter house fund was started and plans were made to build a house. Alumni Edwin H. Gaggin, Class of 1892, and T. Walker Gaggin, Class of 1895, designed the chapter house at Walnut Avenue and University Place (pictured below ). The house opened in 1903.

The Former Delta Kappa Epsilon Chapter House at Syracuse University

The 1970s were not kind to the Greek system at Syracuse University and the chapter moved to smaller quarters on Comstock Avenue. In 1974, the DKE house was sold to the University and it became the Faculty Center. In 1997, it was dedicated as the Goldstein Alumni and Faculty Center, named for Alfred and Ann Goldstein.

The Dekes now reside at 703 Walnut Avenue in what had been the Phi Delta Theta house.  The home next to the Chancellor’s Residence was built in 1903 and originally belonged to Horace Wilkinson.

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The Daily Orange, Syracuse’s student newspaper, recently highlighted the renovations of the Alpha Chi Rho chapter house with a video tour.  In 2016, a pipe burst, causing damage to the built in 1914 structure.

Photo courtesy of The Daily Orange

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Alpha Gamma Delta founder Emily H. Butterfield. was an architect and an authority on fraternity heraldry. She designed the Alpha Chapter’s home at 709 Comstock Avenue. According to the January 1931 Alpha Gamma Delta Quarterly, the home was completed in the fall of 1928. The chapter’s first two homes were rentals. The third home was purchased and “occupied until plans for the new house were executed.”

The Quarterly article gave a detailed description of the chapter’s home at 709 Comstock. The house is Georgian in design:

being of Old Virginia brick with the coping, steps and replica of the coat of arms in buff Indiana limestone. Entrance is through the heavy colonial doorway into the foyer with its high arched windows, fireplace and colorful stone floor. First to the left of the main hallway, which is two steps above the level of the foyer, is the suite of three rooms reserved for the use of the housemother. Beyond, at the right, is the arched entrance to the living room opposite the attractive stairway which leads to the second floor. The living room is spacious in its proportions and with its lovely fireplace with ceiling high built-in bookcases on either side, its creamy walls, walnut beams,oriental rugs and attractive furniture makes a charming setting for the chapter life. At one end of the living room are French doors opening into the sun porch, from which one enters the dining room through an arch. The dining room is also entered through arches from the living room and hall, which makes the entire floor wonderfully adapted for dances and other gatherings.

The dining room is furnished with extensive refectory tables and narrow-backed Windsor chairs. There is also a most attractive built-in buffet. Back of the dining room is the butler’s pantry, the up-to-date kitchen, and two maid’s rooms with bath. On the main floor there are also the coatroom and large lavatory for use at parties, the attractive guest room with its private bath, and the town girls’ room, large and airy with plenty of closet space for all sorts of belongings that may need a safe and temporary housing. The large hall on the second floor is furnished as a lounging room and from it open thirteen bedrooms, each for two girls. All of the rooms differ but each has plenty of space and light and two clothes closets, one for each occupant.

Alpha Gamma Delta, 709 Comstock Avenue

Alpha Gamma Delta, 709 Comstock Avenue

alphagam

The chapter was closed in 2001 and it was recolonized nine years later. During the interim, the house was used as an all-female residence hall called Butterfield House. The chapter returned to the house after the lease with the university ended in 2011. 

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Alpha Phi – A Society and Chapter House of Its Own

Founding Homes of Alpha Gamma Delta

Before 210 Walnut Place – New York Alpha of Pi Beta Phi’s Euclid House

Pi Beta Phi’s New York Alpha Chapter Before 210 Walnut Place 

New York Alpha Chapter House 1911 designed by Ward Wellington Ward. It later served as a home for Zeta Beta Tau.

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Alpha Sigma Alpha – A 100 Year Old Snapshot on Founders’ Day

Alpha Sigma Alpha was founded on November 15, 1901 at the State Female Normal School (now Longwood University) in Farmville, Virginia. Its founders had been asked 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, started their own sorority; they called it Alpha Sigma Alpha.

The Beta Beta Chapter was installed at State Teacher’s College in Greeley, Colorado (now University of Northern Colorado) on  February 19, 1916. Irene Spalding, the chapter’s Acting Historian, wrote about the events of November 1918. The epidemic of which she wrote, the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, affected nearly every college campus. Approximately 675,000 Americans died from it. Spalding wrote:

Of all the inconvenient tomes for the epidemic to descent upon is, this was certainly the greatest! We were quarantined on Tuesday of Rush Week, but Beta Beta was so fortunate as to draw the day before as the date for its most important party. The affair took the form of a dinner party, and it assuredly called for some planning, for we had to entertain thirty-two at an expenditure of fifteen dollars, the limit set by Panhellenic. We never could have done it without the help of our Adviser, Miss Payne, and our housemother, Mrs. Tisdal. There were eight tables, each seating four, attractively arranged in the dining and reception rooms. For decorations we used sumac, barberries and kinikinic. In the center of each table was a red shaded candle that diffused a soft glow. The favors were nut baskets made of red crepe paper. From the handles hung tiny Sorority letters of gold. The place cards, the suggestion of our artistic president, carried the Sorority letters in red and the winged sandal of Hermes.

As the quarantine went into effect the very next day our rivals had no opportunity to show hospitality to any of the new girls. It therefore became a matter of personal rushing. The results have been a revelation to us, for the sororities heretofore have had the feeling that it was brilliant affairs that attracted the new girls. Beta Beta now knows that more can be accomplished by a quiet confidential talk with the girls about sororities in general and about the national standing of Alpha Sigma Alpha than can be done by all the parties, however delightful they may be.

On Victory Day, November 11, 1918, the quarantine was lifted. Bells rang, classes were dismissed and an impromptu parade began. The women of Beta Beta saw it as a prime opportunity to foster their recruitment efforts. A car was borrowed from Mrs. Tisdal and Mrs. Abbott, the chapter’s new patroness. Some members decorated the cars and others searched for the potential new members. Together, the rode in the decorated cars, celebrating the armistice. The morning parade consisted of only the teachers college people, but another parade was held in the afternoon and the townspeople joined in. A bonfire took place that night, but the quarantine was back in effect after the Victory Day celebration was done.

I find it interesting how she described the handling of the bids, which seems to be the precursor of preferential bidding as we know it today: 

As the time drew near for bids to go out, the situation became rather tense. We have a ‘lawyer’ system, as it is called in some places. All the bids are handed to the Dean of Women. As soon as the names of rushees are known, she asks the new girls to list the sororities in order of their preference. Then she gives her the bid she prefers, or, if that is not available, the one nearest her preference.

The chapter pledged eight women, and Spalding added:

If the quarantine continues, we may not be able to have our formal pledging until after Christmas, but, although, we know that the ceremony will mean more to the new girls, we fell sure that they can scarcely be more a part of us than they are right now. If you want to feel at home with your new girls from the very start, try ‘personal’ rushing!

Beta Beta Chapter, circa 1922-23

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