On Sigma Gamma Rho’s Founding Date

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

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

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

McDaniel died from breast cancer in 1952 at the age of 57. Her sorority created the Hattie McDaniel Cancer Awareness and Health Program in her honor. Its mission is to provide education and support of early detection of breast, prostate, ovarian, colon and other cancers as well as research for prevention of the cancers.

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Gamma Phi Beta on Founders’ Day

A church oyster supper was the first social event Frances Haven (Moss) attended after enrolling in Syracuse University in 1874. Her father, Dr. Erastus Otis Haven, had been recently elected Chancellor of the university. At that supper, she met the man who would later become her husband, Charles Melville Moss. She also met two members of Alpha Phi, a women’s fraternity founded at Syracuse in October of 1872. Instead of accepting the invitation to join Alpha Phi which had been offered to her, she joined with three other women – Mary A. Bingham (Willoughby), E. Adeline Curtis, and Helen M. Dodge (Ferguson) –  and they found an organization of their own. The date was November 11, 1874. The organization is Gamma Phi Beta, the first of the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) organizations to use the term “sorority;” Syracuse Latin professor Frank Smalley suggested the word to the young women.

Since it is also the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, it’s an opportune time to tell the story of Charlotte Hoffman Kellogg, better known in the social language of the day as Mrs. Vernon Kellogg.

Charlotte Hoffman was an initiate of the Eta Chapter of Gamma Phi Beta at the University of California Berkeley. She graduated in 1900.

She was one of the speakers at a Panhellenic luncheon at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C., in January of 1932. In her response to the “social and economic revolution we are living through, comes the serious questioning of the right of the sorority to exist,” and that because it was thought to be “an outgrowth of privilege and selfishness,” that it belonged to the past, she said:

As I listen to this charge, I am always amused to set against it my own mental picture of a sorority. I remember a sorority as a place where somebody without position, somebody without money, somebody living in a small third floor room, cooking her breakfast there (and often her supper) after an afternoon of teaching science in order to be able to cram university work into the mornings – a place where such a person found a healthily run home, needed books, music – a meeting spot for friends, a place whose influence extended to those marginal flowerings which drew parties into the ‘working-one’s-way-through’ day. …A sudden invitation – widths of white organdy quickly purchased – Lillian – a machine humming from 3 till 7 – Virginia – an American beauty rose – the beau – the dance – enough thrill to carry science teaching for weeks! In other words, the term sorority in my mind connotes those very things – food, shelter, clothing, happiness, which are the goal of present seeking.

In my own mind the sorority is more akin to the Salvation Army than to institutions of selfishness and privilege ! I am convinced that it is only along lines suggested by this memory of mine that the sorority will live, in the world now in the making.

Charlotte Kellogg and her daughter Jean

Her husband Vernon Kellogg, an entomologist, was on the faculty at Stanford University. She started out as the chairman of the Belgium relief committee at Stanford, and, in 1915, moved up to the position of organizing secretary of the California State Committee. That year, her husband became director of relief work in occupied France and then Brussels. In 1916, Charlotte headed to Belgium. President Woodrow Wilson, Phi Kappa Psi, appointed her to the Commission for Belgian Relief. She spent six months there. Upon her return to the U.S, her book Women of Belgium Turning Tragedy to Triumph was published. She was the only woman on the Commission for Belgian Relief and through her work and the books and magazine articles she wrote, she became known internationally.

A 1918 Crescent of Gamma Phi Beta said this of her:

If you ask Charlotte Kellogg to tell you something of her own achievements, she will answer you in this fashion, ‘It is much more important to get the Gamma Phi Betas started on the milk bottle work than to write an article about me,’ and if the dear lady only realized it, she has revealed in these words the secret of her success. For she has given of herself so wholly, so disinterestedly, so enthusiastically to the cause of Belgium; she has labored so tirelessly for its welfare ; she has placed its interests so far above own, that unconsciously she has become the central figure in the movement for its relief.

Because of her encouragement, Gamma Phi Beta began a Milk Bottle Campaign to help raise funds for Belgian relief.

The milk bottles of Gamma Phi Beta’s milk bottle fundraising campaign. This effort by Gamma Phi took place in theater lobbies where the general public could contribute by putting spare change in the milk bottles.

This appeared in an Arrow of Pi Beta Phi.

 

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The 11th Hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month

November 11 is the date upon which World War I ended – the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918. It had been known as Armistice Day, but in 1954 it was renamed Veterans Day in the United States. In other countries, it is called Remembrance Day.

The haunting poem, In Flanders Fields, was written by John McCrae, M.D., a Lieutenant Colonel in the Canadian Army during World War I. He was a Zeta Psi from the University of Toronto chapter. McCrae wrote the poem after the May 2, 1915 death and burial of his friend and former student Lieutenant Alexis Hannum Helmer. McCrae died of pneumonia on January 28, 1918, while commanding No. 3 Canadian General Hospital (McGill) at Boulogne.

Posts about NPC Women in World War I

I’ve written many posts about the contributions made by NPC women during World War I. Here are links to those posts.

Panhellenic “Refugees” Meet at Sea as World War I Begins

“War Work” by NPC Groups During World War I

World War I “Hello Girls” Led by Grace Banker, a Gamma Phi Beta

R. Louise Fitch, Delta Delta Delta, #notablesororitywomen, #WHM2017

Alexine and Marion Mitchell, Kappa Kappa Gamma, #notablesororitywomen, #WHM2017

Florence Patterson, Gamma Phi Beta, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

Blanche Grand-Maitre, Alpha Xi Delta, #notablesororitywomen, #WHM2017

Gertrude Falkenhagen (Bonde), Alpha Omicron Pi, #notablesororitywomen, #WHM2017

Jeanette Barrows, Alpha Delta Pi, #notablesororitywomen #WHM2017

Dr. May Agness Hopkins, Zeta Tau Alpha, #notablesororitywomen, #WHM2017

Grace Lumpkin, Phi Mu, on Founders’ Day, #notablesororitywomen #WHM2017

Eva Orrick Bandel Wilson, Alpha Phi, #notablesororitywomen #WHM2017

Mary Ann Newcomb (Cornwell), Sigma Kappa, #amazingsororitywoman, #WHM2017

Two Alpha Gamma Delta Yeomanettes, #notablesororitywomen, #WHM2017

#WHM – Grace Wilkie, Chi Omega

#WHM – Gladys Gilpatrick, AΔΠ, and the Pillar in Memorial Stadium

P.E.O.s Knitting for the Navy League During World War I

William C. Levere compiled The History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon in the World War. Published by the George Banta Company in 1928, it was indeed a labor of love for “Billy” Levere, who himself served the county. He and more than 7,000 Sigma Alpha Epsilons answered the call to service. May 3, 1917 in the Lives of Some @SAE1856 During World War I.

Grace Banker, Gamma Phi Beta

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Happy Founders’ Day Sigma Kappa!

On November 9, 1874, Sigma Kappa was founded by five young women, the only females enrolled at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. They received a letter from the faculty approving the organization’s petition, which included a constitution and bylaws.

The five founders of Sigma Kappa are Mary Low Carver, Elizabeth Gorham Hoag, Ida Fuller Pierce, Louise Helen Coburn and Frances Mann Hall. In Sigma Kappa’s first constitution, chapter membership was limited to 25 women. The original chapter is known as the Alpha chapter. After Alpha chapter’s membership reached 25, a Beta chapter was formed. A Gamma chapter soon followed. Although there were some early joint meetings, the members did not think it feasible to continue that way. In 1893, a vote was taken to limit Alpha chapter to 25 members and to allow no more initiations into Beta and Gamma chapters. In due time, Beta and Gamma were no more.

I’m often asked how I had my start in fraternity and sorority history. I answer that I would routinely find myself lost in reading the bound copies of The Arrow of Pi Beta Phi which were in the archives in the Pi Phi chapter house at Syracuse University. It’s a sure bet that I can find myself absorbed in the magazine of any GLO. Last night, I was lost in issues of the Sigma Kappa Triangle from a century ago.

World War I was first and foremost on the minds of the Sigma Kappa women and each chapter shared what it was doing to help the effort.

There was this cute photo of Murette Morgan, sent by her mother.

This letter contains a quote from Mary Love Collins, Chi Omega. 

And this note from the editor about conventions is timeless and any applies to all GLOs!

 

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Iowa Wesleyan We Love Thee

Iowa Wesleyan University in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, has played a major role in the existence of two organizations to which I belong. In fall of 1868, Libbie Brook, a founder of I.C. Sorosis (Pi Beta Phi) at Monmouth College interrupted her studies at Monmouth to enroll at Iowa Wesleyan. There on December 21, 1868, she chartered Pi Phi’s second chapter. A month later, on January 21, 1869, P.E.O. was established by seven young women. Legend has it that Libbie Brook asked some, but not all, of the seven to become members of her organization. Rather than join without those who were asked declined and the seven formed a society of their own.

Iowa Wesleyan is at a crossroads and the future of the institution is in jeopardy. IWU  President Steven E. Titus, J.D., Ph.D., issued the following statement dated November 1, 2018.

I want to provide an update on the Iowa Wesleyan University’s Board of Trustees special session today. It was a tremendously difficult meeting as we reviewed the financial projections of the university.

As you may know, small liberal arts colleges and universities across the country continue to face significant financial challenges. Iowa Wesleyan University is no different. We have struggled, yet survived, for decades because of our strong commitment to our students and the southeast Iowa region. 

This may be surprising given all our progress and accomplishments achieved together over the past five years. Our enrollment has doubled, student retention has increased, and we have tremendously talented and dedicated faculty and staff members. 

The university does not have a healthy endowment or extensive donor network. We have attempted to secure funding to establish a solid financial base. Unfortunately, several anticipated gifts simply have not materialized. At this moment, the university does not have the required financial underpinnings to bridge the gap between strong enrollment and new programming, and the money needed to keep the institution open. 

Today, the Board of Trustees voted to reconvene on November 15, 2018 to consider the future of the institution. Therefore, we are actively and aggressively pursuing additional funding sources, and new and innovative partnerships, collaborations and supporters. The next 14 days are extremely important as we meet with the USDA, regional business and community leaders, and partners in higher education to explore alternatives.  

These decisions may have a profound impact on students, faculty, staff members as well as the entire southeastern Iowa community. Iowa Wesleyan’s economic impact to the southeastern Iowa region is over $55 million annually. We feel a strong responsibility and commitment to continue the mission of Iowa Wesleyan University. 

Thank you for your prayers and patience. We will keep you updated on the Board’s decision.

Although she attended the groundbreaking ceremony, Mary Allen Stafford had died before the building was completed.

The P.E.O. Memorial Library now houses the administrative offices. The P.E.O. Sisterhood raised the funds to build the library building and it is an impressive building on campus. Old Main and Pioneer Hall are still used and the latter includes rooms highlighting the history of P.E.O. When on campus, it is not difficult to imagine what life was like for Ella, Hattie, Mary, Franc, Suela, and the two Alices as they borrowed the Bible from the chapel and headed to the Music Room where they took the oath of sisterhood, written by Alice Babb.

How did I do my part to help IWU? This morning, I made a small donation to the We Love Thee fundraising campaign as a show of support to a very special institution. 

The P.E.O. Memory Room in Old Main Hall at IWU

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A Syracuse Pennant, a Phi Gam Badge and a 100 First Ladies

This weekend I was in Massachusetts for another family wedding. I visited Connecticut in October for the wedding of the November groom’s brother. At that reception I had a random conversation with someone who didn’t know me nor what I write about, and she spontaneously told me about her daughter’s wonderful sorority experience when I asked where her offspring went to college. I wrote about that experience a few posts ago.

At this wedding, I saw someone I hadn’t seen in years. She knows my interest in GLOs. On the day before the wedding, she told me that she had a bag of GLO related items she wanted to show me, but had forgotten them at home.

I told her to send me pictures and I would help identify the items as best I could. At the reception on Saturday, she showed me  two items she found in her jewelry bag when she was getting ready for the wedding.

The first was an easy one. It was a Phi Gamma Delta badge. The second item was a 1.5 x 2 inch piece of embossed leather with a Syracuse pendant on it. She might have come over to just show me the items, but then she gave them to me for safekeeping. 

 

***

An Alpha Gam friend who is a quilter posted an article about a quilt, First Ladies, that Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry designed and made to commemorate the centennial of the 19th Amendment.

Below are 100 names that she included on the quilt. I spy several sorority women on the list. (Visit the quilt website if you can’t read the names below and you are up for a challenge.) How many can you name? Use the contact form below.

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Happy Founders’ Day Alpha Sigma Tau!

I am a few days early, but my Alpha Sigma Tau friends are celebrating. On November 4, 1899, eight young women, Mable Chase, Ruth Dutcher, May Gephart, Harriet Marx, Eva O’Keefe, Adriance Rice, Helene Rice, and Mayene Tracy, formed a sorority at the Michigan State Normal College (now Eastern Michigan University) in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Alpha Sigma Tau was the name they chose. The organization became a national one in October 1925. 

In 1926, Alpha Sigma Tau joined the Association of Education Sororities (AES). Alpha Sigma Tau became a full member of the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) when the merger of AES and NPC was formalized in 1951.

On May 5, 1928, the Iota chapter at Emporia State University in Emporia, Kansas, held a Mother’s dinner. It was the climax of a week-end long house party for their mothers. The above picture is of chapter members and their mothers. Mother’s Day became an official holiday in 1914. Mother’s/Mom’s weekends have been around a long time, and I love this picture of an early celebration.

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A Red Door Greeting on Founders’ Day @OfficialSigEp

November first is Sigma Phi Epsilon’s Founders’ Day. Twelve young men at the University of Richmond, one of whom, Carter Ashton Jenkins, was a Chi Phi member from Rutgers University, founded the fraternity in 1901. Jenkins first sought a charter from his fraternity, but the request was declined because the Baptist school was considered too small.

Instead Jenkins found 11 other congenial men who were also eager to share a brotherhood built upon “the love of God and the principle of peace through brotherhood.”  They named the organization Sigma Phi unaware that there was already a men’s fraternity by that name. The group then took the name Sigma Phi Epsilon.

One of the fraternity’s traditions began at Syracuse University. New York Alpha was the organization’s 18th chapter; it was founded on the campus in 1905. The first red door made its appearance in 1928 at the chapter’s former home on Walnut Place; that building is now the Slutzker International Center.

The Slutzker International Center at Syracuse University, the former home of Sigma Phi Epsilon on Walnut Place. The red door tradition began at this house.

In 1928, a few of the brothers painted the front door red, one  the fraternity’s colors. The “welcome to all” tradition caught on quickly and red doors became a mainstay of Sig Ep chapters nationwide.

This post was to have included a picture of my husband’s Sig Ep badge. Alas, I have been dispatched to the Sunshine State on family matters and that will have to wait for another day,

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Finding Common Ground – A Lost Art?

Raise your hand if you’ve ever looked at your phone and pretended to be engrossed in something in order to avoid dealing with other people. Or if you’ve ever used headphones or ear buds as a way to tune out those around you.

I often say that life is just one big rush/recruitment party. The ability to meet new people and make common connections is an important one and it enters into almost every adult situation – finding a job, acing an interview, moving to a new city, making friends, finding a spouse/partner, moving to a new neighborhood, and on an on. 

But finding common ground in a polarized society is not easy. People tend to surround themselves with those who think as they do. And they dislike/hate those who think differently. After all, it is easier to just dismiss entire groups of people than to take the time and energy to find common ground.

As one who is a proponent of Greek-Letter Organizations, I know all to well the prejudices that some people have against these organizations. Sometimes these prejudices stem from a bad experience – their own or that of a family member/friend, but oftentimes the intense hatred of GLOs stems from no experience at all. They hate fraternities and sororities simply because they hate fraternities and sororities.

It’s much harder to hate someone when you share common interests. Agreeing to disagree has lost its value in today’s society. Social media is a misnomer in my book. Anti-social media might be a better descriptor because it takes arguing and disagreeing and being offended to new heights. Yet, I am reminded of something I saw on social media. It involved a dog barking furiously and ferociously at another dog on the other side of a glass door. However, when the door opened, the barking dog retreated and walked away. It seemed like a good metaphor for the interactions that take place in social media.

It was this quote in the obituary of a friend’s father that planted the seed for this post, “Despite having opposite political affiliations, our friendship ‘across the aisle’ endured a half century because, while we differed and disagreed, we never argued or got angry.” The friends obviously had common ground on which to stand and appreciate one another.

It is much too easy to label those who think and feel differently, dismiss them and be done with it. Finding common ground, making connections, discovering the goodness in us all takes time and effort. But the rewards, the betterment of all of us, is worth that effort. 

Put down the phone. Open your ears. Start talking to those around you. Ask questions. Find connections. Be civil. Make new friends. Be a part of the solution, not part of the problem.

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Delta Zeta and Alpha Epsilon Phi, Founded on October 24

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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