The West Point “Chapter” of ATO, Circa 1917

On September 11, 1865, Alpha Tau Omega was founded by three young Virginia Military Institute cadets – Otis Allan Glazebrook, Alfred Marshall, and Erskine Mayo Ross.

As VMI cadets, the three, along with most of their classmates aged 15 to 25, took part in the Battle of New Market. Ten cadets died. Another 45 were wounded. The three had seen the carnage and in founding Alpha Tau Omega they sought to reunite men in the aftermath of the Civil War.

In reading through a 1917 issue of The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega, I came across an article titled The West Point Chapter. I found it interesting that an organization founded at a southern military academy had, at one brief time, a gathering at a northern military academy. Myrl Miller, an initiate of the Wittenberg College chapter wrote:

The West Point chapter greets you! Perhaps most of you were not aware that you had a chapter at West Point, and are much surprised. This surprise is excusable, for officially there is no chapter of Alpha Tau, or of any other fraternity, at West Point. But unofficially we, seven of us, gathered together here at the Military Academy, have made so bold as to call ourselves  the “West Point Chapter.” Greek-letter designation we have none.

At the beginning of the year there were four Alpha Taus enrolled as cadets at the United States Military Academy. Already this was quite a large representation for one fraternity. But in June of this year three “plebes” entered the academy, and now we are proud to say that, so far as we have been able to discover, Alpha Tau Omega has the largest representation at Uncle Sam’s Military School of any fraternity in the country.

The seven Alpha Tau Omegas were:

George Hatton Weems, Southwestern Presbyterian University. Weems retired from the Army in 1951 with the rank of Brigadier General. He served in both World Wars. 

Carroll Payne Tye,  Georgia Institute of Technology. (From a 1920 PalmCaptain Carroll P. Tye, U. S. Army, has been assigned to Pomona College, Los Angeles, California, as instructor in military science. Captain Tye, who is a native of Atlanta, Ga., recently visited his parents and while there attended a meeting of the Atlanta Alumni Association at which he gave an account of his interesting experience in Siberia.) The 1940 census has him listed as a real estate broker, living in Beverly Hills, California.

Joseph J. Twitty, Georgia Institute of Technology. Twitty retired as a Brigadier General and he served in World War I, World War II and the Korean War.

Elmer Hugo Almquist, University of Nebraska. He was still an Army man when he died in 1939 while stationed in Columbia, Missouri. 

Basil H. Perry, Brown University. Perry retired from the Army in 1953 with the rank of Brigadier General. He served in both World Wars.

Charles R. Gildart, Sr., Albion College. He retired as a Colonel in 1951. 

Myrl Miller, M.D. He died in 1981 in Akron, Ohio

Miller finished his article by noting that West Point regulations prohibited meetings of any secret organizations. He reported that free time was scarce, “but in spite of these disadvantages the spirit of fellowship among us is strong.” Moreover, he wrote, “In case there are any more A. T. O.’s who contemplate coming to West Point, we want to assure them that they will find a hearty welcome from their brothers, who will do all they can to help them through the trials which always befall the ‘plebe.'”

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The Excitement Builds for the Sorority Women Competing in Miss America 2018

On Sunday, September 10, Miss America 2018 will be chosen from among the 2017 state winners. My friend Lyn Harris, Chi Omega’s Archivist, will be in the audience cheering on her four Chi Omega sisters as they compete for the crown. The show is on ABC at 9 p.m. Eastern/8 p.m. Central.

I will be live blogging the events at http://wp.me/P20I1i-3ER, the same place you can find the list of sorority women who are competing. (Please let me know if I am missing anyone. I try my darndest to uncover the connections, but sometimes one slips by me!)

The preliminary rounds have started and finalists have been chosen for some of the awards. 

Miss Texas, Margana Wood, Zeta Tau Alpha, University of Texas, Winner of Lifestyle and Fitness.

Miss Louisiana, Laryssa Bonacquisti, Chi Omega, Louisiana State University, Winner of Lifestyle and Fitness AND Talent competitions.

Miss Florida, Sara Zeng, Alpha Chi Omega, Florida State University, Winner of Lifestyle.

The finalists for the Jean Bartel Quality of Life Award are:

Miss Alabama Jessica Procter, Alpha Gamma Delta, University of Alabama – WINNER $6,000 Scholarship

Miss District of Columbia Briana Kinsey

Miss Kansas Krystian Fish

Miss Minnesota Brianna Drevlow

Miss Mississippi Anne Elizabeth Buys, Chi Omega, Mississippi State University

Miss North Dakota Cara Mund, Cara Mund, Kappa Delta, Brown University, First Runner-Up, $4,000 Scholarship

Miss South Carolina Suzi Roberts, Delta Gamma, University of Texas, Second Runner-Up, $2,000 Scholarship

The finalists for the 2018 STEM Scholarships are:

Miss District of Columbia Briana Kinsey (Winner)

Miss Kentucky Molly Matney (Winner)

Miss Massachusetts Jillian Zucco (Winner)

Miss Nebraska Allison Tietjen, Alpha Phi, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Miss Nevada Andrea Martinez

 

Miracle Maker Awards

Miss South Carolina Suzi Roberts, Delta Gamma, University of Texas, National and Local Miracle Maker winner 

Miss Alabama, Jessica Procter, Alpha Gamma Delta, University of Alabama, Third place Local Miracle Maker

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And Friendship’s Chain of Golden Hue Will Link Eternally

Sometime, at dusk when the sun sinks low, / The flight of my arrow shall end. / Through the silent hush of the evening glow, / I shall slip away my friend. / But the silken tie of the wine and blue / Will bind through eternity / And friendship’s chain of golden hue / Will link eternally.

These words of Pi Beta Phi’s Memorial Hymn have been running through my head all weekend. I learned that a dear Pi Phi friend (and P.E.O. sister) passed away. She was a charter member of the Southern Illinois Alumnae Club and  a 1950s initiate of the chapter at Kansas State University. When I spoke at her chapter’s Centennial in 2015, I volunteered to drive her there, but she was too ill to make the trek. I made sure to send her the 100-year history which the committee compiled. That made her very happy.

Last week I was with the Butler University Pi Phis as they celebrated 120 years. I had been in the chapter’s archives several years ago and I had a good collection of photos to show as I spoke. There were early pictures and those women are all gone. The pictures of the pledge classes of the 1940s and 1950s show young smiling faces in pencil skirts and sweaters. Those young women are now in their 80s and 90s. One woman, whose granddaughter was an active chapter member, started naming the women in a 1950-something picture. What a precious moment that was and I could tell some chapter members caught the subtle significance of this. She was once sitting where they sit today. 

While Pi Phi performs a memorial service at each convention, to honor the women whose lives ended during the time between conventions, it does not have a special designation for those women no longer with us. 

 

Chapter Eternal is the designation used by some organizations to signify departed members. These organizations include: Alpha Delta Phi; Alpha Tau Omega; Alpha Xi Delta; Chi Phi; Delta Phi Epsilon; Delta Tau Delta; Kappa Delta; Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Kappa Tau; Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Kappa Phi; Pi Lambda Phi; Phi Mu; Phi Sigma Sigma; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Alpha Mu; Sigma Chi; Sigma Nu; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sigma Tau Gamma; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Theta Chi; and Theta Xi.

Ad Astra, “to the stars,” is used by Phi Gamma Delta to signify those members who have died. The complete quote is “Fratres qui fuerunt sed nunc ad astra,” meaning “Brothers who were, but are now with the stars.” 

Chapter Celestial is the designation given to Kappa Sigma’s deceased members.

Omega Chapter is used by Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Sigma Phi, Chi Omega, Phi Beta Sigma, Omega Delta Phi, Omega Psi Phi, Sigma Lambda Beta, Sigma Lambda Gamma, and Sigma Sigma Sigma.

Omega Rho is Sigma Gamma Rho’s  designation for deceased members.

Mystic Circle is Delta Kappa Epsilon’s term for deceased members.

Silent Chapter has been used by Alpha Phi and Zeta Tau Alpha.

Chapter Invisible is the designation used by Kappa Alpha Psi.

Chapter Grand is the term used by Alpha Gamma Delta and Phi Delta Theta.

A snippet from a 1904 Scroll of Phi Delta Theta

Sigma Chi’s mention of a deceased member is usually followed by “All honor to his name.”

As always, I appreciate addition, corrections, etc.

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GLO Members Doing Us Proud!

It’s the Friday before Labor Day. There are two things I’ve been meaning to write about all summer and two that fell into my lap yesterday.

Julie Crider Wisbrock became a member of Alpha Chi Omega while at the University of Kansas. After graduation, she became a chapter leadership consultant and then a chapter advisor while working in Chicago. For the past five years she has been a smiling face at Pi Beta Phi’s Headquarters. Julie is currently Pi Phi’s senior director of chapter support. Recently, Julie was named one of Alpha Chi Omega’s Real. Strong. Women of Distinction. Congratulations, Julie! (To see the list of women who were also honored along with Julie, see https://www.alphachiomega.org/meet-us/where-we-stand/real-strong-women/2017-real-strong-women-of-distinction-award-winner/)

Julie Wisbrock

***

Yesterday, I asked my Facebook friends for suggestions about where to donate funds for Hurricane Harvey flood relief efforts. A whole host of suggestions were made and I went down the list and made good use of my credit card. I suspect those of you who are able to do the same have already done that, too. (Those who read this blog regularly are very nice, generous and giving men and women who wear the badges of GLOs.) The devastation is heartbreaking. Maybe you’ve seen the coverage of “Mattress Mack,” Jim McIngvale, owner of Houston-based Gallery Furniture. McIngvale, a Pi Kappa Alpha, opened his furniture stores to Harvey evacuees because “It was the right thing to do.” 

***

The Southern Illinois University Alumni Magazine rarely, if ever, contains items relating to GLO membership, so this entry caught me by surprise. Congratulations, Thomas Marten!

***

And from the Treasures from the Archives file, I present to you this precious note from Phi Kappa Psi’s latest magazine.

Pickfair, the home in which Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. lived before she married “Buddy” Rogers.

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Two Sets of Sisters, a Catholic Priest, and Silver Award Winner?

Which NPC sorority founded on this date 105 years ago counts among its founders two sets of sisters and a Catholic priest? Hint, it is the same NPC sorority whose former National President was honored this year by National Interfraternity Conference with a Silver Medal. It’s Theta Phi Alpha, of course. Happy 105th Birthday!

On August 30, 1912, Theta Phi Alpha was founded at the University of Michigan. Although founded on August 30, Theta Phi Alpha celebrates Founders’ Day on April 30, the Feast Day of St. Catherine of Siena.* St. Catherine is the patroness of the organization and her motto, “Nothing great is ever achieved without much enduring, ” is Theta Phi Alpha’s motto as well.

At that time Theta Phi Alpha was founded, Catholics were not always welcome in the other fraternal organizations on campus. Moreover, the University of Michigan is likely the only state university which can count a Catholic priest among its founders. In 1817, Father Gabriel Richard was a co-founder of the Catholepistemiad of Michigania which later became known as the University of Michigan. (The University celebrated its 200 birthday a few days ago!) He served as its Vice-President from 1817-21. In 1821 he was appointed to the Board of Trustees and served until his death in 1832. So, it is therefore interesting to note the Catholic connection between the Catholic sorority and the state university founded by a Catholic priest.  When Theta Phi Alpha was founded, the Catholic hierarchy was of the belief that Catholic women should be attending Catholic colleges and universities. Giving Catholic women the opportunity to join a Catholic sorority could provide an opportunity to keep them close to their Catholic roots at a secular institution.

In 1909, Father Edward D. Kelly, a Catholic priest and the pastor of the university’s student chapel organized Omega Upsilon. He believed that the Catholic women at the university should have the opportunity to belong to an organization  that “resembled the Catholic homes from which they came.”

After Father Kelly left campus and became the Auxiliary Bishop of Detroit, Omega Upsilon was struggling.  There were no alumnae to guide the organization. Bishop Kelly’s vision that the Catholic women at Michigan should have a place to call their own was still alive even though he was not on campus. He enlisted the assistance of Amelia McSweeney, a 1898 University of Michigan alumna. Together with seven Omega Upsilon alumnae, plans were made to establish a new organization, Theta Phi Alpha.

The Founders of Theta Phi Alpha

Theta Phi Alpha’s ten founders are Amelia McSweeney, Mildred M. Connely, May C. Ryan, Selma Gilday, Camilla Ryan Sutherland, Helen Ryan Quinlan, Katrina Caughey Ward, Dorothy Caughey Phalan, Otilia Leuchtweis O’Hara, and Eva Stroh Bauer Everson.  Seven of them were Omega Upsilon alumnae and two were undergraduate members of Omega Upsilon.

According to the NIC press release:

Dr. Mari Ann Callais began her tenure in the fraternal movement as a fraternity/sorority life professional at both Mississippi State University and Southeastern Louisiana University. Throughout the 25 years that have followed, and counting, Dr. Callais has become a sought-after keynote speaker and facilitator for fraternity and sorority leadership events, a staff member of Delta Delta Delta Fraternity serving as Senior Director of Special Initiatives, and as national president of Theta Phi Alpha, among other notable roles serving the fraternal industry.

Congratulations Theta Phi Alpha and Mari Ann!

** Saint Catherine was canonized in 1461. From 1597 until 1628, the feast of Saint Catherine of Siena was celebrated on April 29, the date she died. In 1628, due to a conflict with the feast of Saint Peter of Verona, hers was moved to April 30. In 1969, the Catholic Church reinstated her feast date as April 29. 
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Sisters Helping Sisters Takes on New Meaning After Harvey

This week THE Foundations Seminar is taking place in Indianapolis. Established in the 1990s, the Seminar has “provided fraternal foundation professionals and volunteers with a forum to collaborate on issues unique to advancing their organization’s missions.” Those meeting in Indy this week will have had the opportunity to hear three keynote speakers and take part in “36 educational sessions focused on working with data, digital fundraising, branding, engagement, donor retention, and many other key and emerging issues and trends affecting our organizations.”

I’d venture to say that almost all, if not all, GLO Foundations offer academic scholarships. During the 2015-16 academic year, the 26 National Panhellenic Conference member groups (and/or their foundations) provided more than $5 million dollars in academic scholarships to their members to pursue undergraduate, graduate, and professional studies. In addition, most of the groups fund emergency grants to members. The recent flooding in Texas bring this kind of philanthropy to the forefront.

In the early 1900s, many of the NPC groups established Loan Funds to help their members pay for schooling, in a time when loan options were very limited. Additionally, other funds to help members in need were created.

Since 1922, the Rose McGill Aid has helped Kappa Kappa Gamma members in need. The same can be said for Kappa Alpha Theta’s Friendship Fund, established in 1926. Pi Beta Phi’s Emma Harper Turner Fund began in 1946 as a way for Pi Phis to help other Pi Phis confidentially and anonymously. 

Rose McGill, for whom Kappa Kappa Gamma’s assistance fund is named, is third from the right in the back row in this 1920 picture of the University of Toronto Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter.

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

Alpha Chi Omega’s Member Assistance Grants

Alpha Delta Pi’s Abigail Davis Emergency Grants (for collegiate members) and Clasped Hands Fund Grants (for alumnae)

Alpha Epsilon Phi’s Cheryl Kraff Cooper, M.D, Giraffe Fund

Alpha Gamma Delta’s SIS Grant Program

Alpha Omicron Pi’s Ruby Fund

Alpha Phi’s Forget Me Not Fund

Alpha Sigma Alpha’s Janice Adams Membership Assistance Fund

Alpha Xi Delta’s Heart Fund Grants

Chi Omega’s Sisterhood Fund

Delta Delta Delta’s Crescent Fund

Delta Gamma’s Anchor Grants 

Delta Phi Epsilon’s Harriette Hirsch Sisterhood Fund

Delta Zeta’s Elizabeth Coulter Stephenson Grants (providing financial help for sorority expenses)

Gamma Phi Beta’s Grant-In-Aid

Kappa Alpha Theta’s Friendship Fund

Kappa Delta’s Alumnae Crisis Fund

Kappa Kappa Gamma Rose McGill Fund

Phi Mu’s Leona Hughes Hughes Heart & Hand Fund and the Betty Nell Wilkinson Emergency Scholarship

Pi Beta Phi’s Emma Harper Turner Fund

Sigma Kappa’s Alumnae Heart Fund

I hope those living through the torment of Hurricane Harvey will avail themselves of any aid for which they are eligible, especially any of these specialized programs targeting initiated members of their respective organizations. This is the time for sisters to help sisters in any way they can.

(I have tried my best to cobble the information together. If I have misrepresented any of these funds or have forgotten others, please send me a message and I will revise. Any errors and omissions are unintentional.)

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On the University of Michigan’s 200th Anniversary, the Beginnings of Its Sorority System

Women’s fraternities provided the early college woman with a support system. There were several campuses where, by 1902, there were or had been chapters of each of the seven founding NPC members. The University of Michigan is one of these campuses.*

The University of Michigan, located in Ann Arbor, Michigan, was founded on August 26, 1817.  Coeducation was a topic that had been discussed for many years.  In the late 1850s, the Board of Regents was notified that 12 women would apply for the fall 1858 class.  A few followed through on the application.  A committee was formed and several college presidents were consulted about the question of coeducation:

President Hopkins of Williams College was in favor of trying the experiment.  Dr. Nott, of Union College, was undecided, and, though he would not wish to make such an innovation on his own responsibility, was yet evidently willing that some institution should be compelled by public opinion to undertake it.  President Walker, of Harvard, and President Woolsey, of Yale, were decidedly opposed to co-education.  Horace Mann, President of Antioch College, and C. G. Finney, President of Oberlin College, were both in favor of the joint education of the sexes, but under such restrictions and surveillance as could not possibly be practiced in Ann Arbor.  President Tappan and the entire faculty of the University of Michigan were opposed to it.  (Farrand, 1885, p. 188)

Ultimately it was decided to reject the applications that the women had put forth and coeducation remained an unfulfilled idea on the Michigan campus.  The faculty were, by and large, against the idea as were many of the male students.  The main objection was that the buildings were overcrowded and there was not room for the women.  Moreover, the university was operating in a deficit and the funds to make the campus suitable for women were not available.

In 1867, in the aftermath of the Civil War, the Michigan legislature recommended that women be admitted into the institution (Peckham, 1994).  Erastus O. Haven, who was then the President of the University, along with the Board of Regents, vetoed the idea of women attending the university.  There is evidence, however, that Haven may have been agreeable to the women having their own separate college (Bordin, 1999).

Erastus Otis Haven, father of Gamma Phi Beta founder Frances Haven Moss. (For more about him see http://wp.me/p20I1i-e5)

Madelon Stockwell, a student from Kalamazoo, was the first woman admitted to the University of Michigan.  Her admittance to the university took much maneuvering on the part of her mentors, the Stones, a husband and wife who were Stockwell’s teachers at Kalamazoo College.  The Stones researched the laws governing the University of Michigan and appealed to an Episcopal bishop who was also a member of the Board of Regents.  Haven left Michigan in 1869 for a similar position at Northwestern University and Henry Simmons Frieze became the president pro tem of the university.  The Board of Regents at a meeting in early 1870 voted that the university would be open to any person possessing the required literary and moral qualifications.  After passing an entrance examination, one reportedly more difficult than the exam given the male applicants, Stockwell began her studies in the spring of 1870 (Bordin, 1999).

By the fall of 1870, there were 34 women studying at the University of Michigan.  The first woman to receive a degree was Amanda Sanford who obtained a M.D. in 1871 (Farrand, 1885).  With perhaps a bit of prejudice, Sagendorph (1948) labeled these pioneering female students as “Souls with a Purpose:”

“It was said the women tended toward the ‘medical missionary’ sort.  Class pictures show us the most awesome collection of stony-faced females ever seen outside an old maids’ home.  Probably they didn’t intend to look like that, but in spite of the stiff styles of the period those co-eds must have been sour by nature.  Perhaps that’s why coeducation at Michigan was not popular until after the turn of the century. . . . They encountered a prejudice against nice girls being at college at all, and reacted to it by becoming overserious and so prim that even in class pictures they seem to have come straight from a Salvation Army meeting.” (pp. 111-112)

Kappa Alpha Theta was the first women’s fraternity to appear on the University of Michigan campus.  In October, 1879, the members of the Kappa Alpha Theta chapter at Indiana Asbury College (now DePauw University) asked that a member contact one of five Michigan students who had written asking about the fraternity.  On December 10, 1879, a member of the Alpha chapter arrived in Ann Arbor and initiated six Michigan students into Kappa Alpha Theta (Wilson, 1956).  The campus publications, all run by men, lampooned the establishment of the first women’s fraternity chapter (Sangendorph, 1948).

Gamma Phi Beta was the second women’s fraternity to appear on the Michigan campus.  Frances Haven, one of the fraternity’s founders, was the daughter of the former university president, Erastus O. Haven.  A member of the Alpha chapter at Syracuse University wrote to a friend at Michigan asking if there were women interested in starting a chapter of Gamma Phi Beta.  Two of the Syracuse University Gamma Phi Beta members were sent to Ann Arbor to investigate the conditions.  On June 7, 1882, the Beta Chapter of Gamma Phi Beta was installed (Cook, 1911). This second chapter of Gamma Phi Beta led to the coining of the word “sorority” by Syracuse University professor Frank Smalley.

In 1885, two Delta Gamma sisters from the chapter at Buchtel  College in Akron, Ohio, chapter transferred to the University of Michigan.  It was their intention to establish a Delta Gamma chapter.  A Michigan student who was a friend of the sisters from Akron traveled to the 1885 Madison, Wisconsin, convention and was initiated into Delta Gamma there.  The three went back to Ann Arbor in the fall and were joined by four others who all became charter members of the Delta Gamma chapter (Stevenson, Carvill & Shepard, 1973).

The women who comprised the Kappa Alpha Theta chapter were strong minded and came into conflict with Kappa Alpha Theta policies.  The chapter’s charter was withdrawn due to a convention vote at a specially called meeting of Kappa Alpha Theta, held at Wooster, Ohio, on February 25, 1886.  With the assistance of the Emma Winner Rogers, wife of the Dean of the Law School Henry Wade Rogers, herself an alumna of Kappa Alpha Theta, and the efforts of three former members of Kappa Alpha Theta, the 15 Ex-Thetas became known as Collegiate Sorosis.  The group took on the name of Collegiate Sorosis on May 14, 1886.  It was the only collegiate chapter of the New York Sorosis Club (Robson, 1968; Collegiate Sorosis, 1936).

Charter members of Collegiate Sorosis

Two Pi Beta Phi members from Iowa chapters were attending the University of Michigan and they selected three other women to be charter members of the Michigan Beta chapter.  On April 7, 1888, the Pi Beta Phi chapter was installed (Helmick, 1915).

Kappa Kappa Gamma was installed on October 2, 1890.  Two separate groups of women had petitioned Kappa Kappa Gamma for a charter.  Both groups were equally worthy and the Kappa Kappa Gamma Grand Council chose 9 of the 13 applicants from the two groups to be charter members (Burton-Roth & Whiting-Westermann, 1932).

In 1892, two Alpha Phi alumnae living in Chicago went to the campus and invited women whom they felt were congenial to Alpha Phi to help start a chapter.  Ten women were initiated.  In 1893, the 12 members moved into their first rented chapter house (McElroy, 1913).

Although the former active chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta had become Collegiate Sorosis, a local organization, when the Kappa Alpha Theta charter was revoked, a group of alumnae remained loyal to Kappa Alpha Theta.  These alumnae sought the opportunity to reestablish the chapter.  On June 29, 1893, the Eta chapter was rechartered (Wilson, 1956).  One of its competitors on the Michigan campus continued to be Collegiate Sorosis, the local organization founded by some of the former members of the defunct chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta.

The Delta Delta Delta chapter was installed on November 1, 1894.  Four Michigan students who had a friend belonging to the Delta Delta Delta chapter at Adrian College wrote to the fraternity about the possibility of establishing a chapter.  The chapter did not last long and the charter was returned in 1900 (Haller, 1988).

According to Sagendorf (1948), the fraternity system flourished at the University of Michigan due to “the absence of dormitories, the squalid conditions of some student rooming houses, and the growing spirit of clannishness among student groups as the attendance soared” (p. 160)

*From – Coeducation and the History of Women’s Fraternities 1867-1902, by Frances DeSimone Becque, Dissertation, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, 2002, pp. 99-104  All rights reserved.

 


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The Power of a Handwritten Note

Yesterday, while doing errands, I stopped at the bank where the Southern Illinois Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi has its account. Several members sent in checks while I was out-of-town. The envelopes were clipped together. At the bank, I opened the envelopes and put the deposit together because I didn’t have time to do it before I left the house. How wonderful it was to find this note from one of the club members. It warmed my heart.

The mailbox had this note from the Pi Phi daughter of a long-time Pi Phi friend. She’s a board member of the Lawrence Humane Society. I made a small donation to her LHS “For Them” campaign. One of my granddogs and a grandcat were former LHS animals.

The handwritten note that spurred me to write this post made its way to me later in the afternoon. I spent time sorting for the upcoming Friends of Carbondale Public Library Book Sale. For some reason, and I really don’t know why, I opened up a 1958 copy of The Ugly American. Maybe I opened it because it had a dust jacket in pristine condition and it was protected by a mylar cover. I saw this message and its sweet sentiments touched my heart.

The former owner, whose identity I’m fairly certain I’ve figured out, passed away several years ago. She was chapter president of the Chi Omega chapter at Indiana University. How heartwarming it was that the chapter gave her a book to let her know how special she was to the chapter. It was a book that she kept for 50 years, her lifetime. Did she open it on those days when the world felt all wrong? Did those thoughts penned by an anonymous sister decades before envelop her in the love of her sisters, in the joys of a shared bond, in the sincere friendship that can and should last a lifetime? How long did the chapter carry on this special tradition? And why don’t we do more of this today? Gift cards and trinkets are fleeting, but the power and permanence of a book with a handwritten note can last a lifetime.

Handwritten notes are precious. Write one to someone today, and make their day, too.

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Old GLO HQs in Marshall and Evanston, Illinois

We were driving in I-70 to Dayton, Ohio, from the airport in St. Louis, where my husband picked me up. As we were almost through Illinois, I was looking out the window and I spotted a sign that noted we were a mile away from Marshall, Illinois. It took me a minute to register why I knew of Marshall and then I quickly implored my husband to pull off and exit the highway. He’s a good sport and followed along. We headed for Marshall not really knowing where we were going. I promised him that if we did not locate the former National-Dixie Hotel in ten minutes time, I would abandon the quest for another day. I assured him I’d know the building when I saw it.

In 1933, Beatrice Stephenson, an alumna of the University of Illinois chapter of Pi Beta Phi was named Director of Pi Phi’s Central Office, which was then located in Bloomington, Illinois. Another move of Central Office was made after Beatrice married Carson Mayer Purdunn, a Clark County State Attorney, and member of Alpha Delta Phi, on October 21, 1933. This time, it moved to three rooms in the National-Dixie Building in Marshall, Illinois.

Carson Purdunn died of a heart attack in February 1943 while he was a partner in the law firm of Scofield and Purdunn. He was 36 years old. In September of 1943, Pi Phi’s Central Office was relocated to Decatur, Illinois. Beatrice Purdunn retired as Director when she married John Felmley in 1947.

***

Another former fraternity headquarters is in the news. A friend in the Chicago area sent me this link http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/evanston/news/ct-evr-plans-for-harley-clarke-property-tl-0627-20170627-story.html


The Harley Clarke mansion at 2603 Sheridan Road in Evanston, Illinois, was purchased by Sigma Chi Fraternity on May 31, 1950 for use as its headquarters. A decade later, the city of Evanston, in the quest to expand the lakefront park, began discussions with the fraternity to acquire the beach which was located on the property. Knowing that the city might ultimately acquire the property by condemnation, if necessary, the fraternity chose to sell the entire property.

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“Eclipse! What Eclipse?” #GreatAmericanEclipse

“Eclipse! What eclipse?” is how I interrupted a speaker at the Rotary Club of Carbondale-Breakfast meeting about two years ago. The speaker was gracious and answered my question before moving on but I could tell I wasn’t the only one who was wondering what she meant when she started her talk. Since then, the eclipse of 2017 (and another in 2024) have been the talk of the town. The site of the longest duration of the eclipse was a few miles south of Carbondale, in the small little town of Makanda, Illinois.

For more than a year, Carbondale has been preparing for the influx of visitors and NASA scientists. We locals were inundated with pre-eclipse hype about the expected traffic delays. None materialized except for the exodus out of town, but I am getting ahead of myself.

As Carbondale welcomed visitors, we visited the Bucky Dome, something we’ve never had the opportunity to do. Buckminster Fuller taught in the Art and Design program at Southern Illinois University Carbondale from 1959-72. He was one of the distinguished individuals SIUC President Delyte Morris hired as he transformed the institution from a sleepy teachers college to a comprehensive university. The geodesic dome Fuller designed and had built is at 407 South Forest Avenue (see https://www.fullerdomehome.com/).

In the loft library of the Bucky Dome. The shelves will someday have books on them again. If you look closely at the picture in the background, you can see Bucky in front of the shelves.

Yesterday was a special day in southern Illinois. As I walked the dogs in the neighborhood, I saw lots of out-of-state cars and many neighbors had visitors. As we headed outside in preparation of the event, I noted that it felt like the time after the derecho but with electricity. (In 2009, a derecho came through the area and we were without power for nearly a week, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_2009_Southern_Midwest_derecho.) 

One of the granddogs ready for the eclipse.

Photo courtesy of the Metropolis Planet

Chi Psi Headquarters in Nashville also had prime viewing for the eclipse.

The Beta Theta Pi chapters in the direct path of the eclipse. One of those logos is the SIUC Saluki dog (top row, on the right) signifying the chapter at SIUC.

A selfie during the total eclipse.

My friends at the Pi Phi Headquarters in Town and Country, Missouri, slightly west of St. Louis, were outside celebrating the eclipse, too. This photo appears to be one taken at night. Not so. It was taken as the sun was hidden by the moon, and the spotlights came on.

The Pi Phi HQ during the eclipse (photo courtesy of Betsy McCune)

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I would also be remiss if I did not mention that Richard “Dick” Claxton Gregory passed away this weekend. He was a member of the Beta Eta Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha. In 2009, he was named as one of SIUC’s Distinguished Alumni. He and his wife Lillian were Grand Marshalls of the Homecoming parade. That weekend, he was the first person inducted into the Varsity Center for the Arts Hall of Fame.

The Beta Eta Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha. Dick Gregory is third from left in the top row. To the left of him is his roommate Harvey Welch, Jr., who after a career in the Air Force returned to SIUC as a student affairs administrator.

Gregory, a distance runner, chose to attend SIUC after being courted by more than 100 institutions. He was captain of the cross-country and track teams. In 1953, he was the first black student athlete to win the outstanding athlete of the year award. My sincere condolences to his family, friends, and Alpha Phi Alpha brothers.

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