Kappa Alpha Theta’s 1924 Grand Convention took place at the West Baden Springs Hotel in West Baden, Indiana. It was billed as a homecoming convention and took place from June 27-July 1. Most of the attendees made their way there via rail. Extensive instructions for securing tickets were published in the organization’s magazine. Some of the attendees rode the special train that spent several hours in Greencastle, site of the founding. Then the train went onto Bloomington where the second chapter was established. Those opting for this side trip would spend the night on the train and arrive at West Baden in the morning.
Jeannette Barnes (Monnet), an initiate of the University of Oklahoma chapter attended the convention. When Barnes left Union Station in St. Louis, “there were girls everywhere wearing Kappa Alpha Theta badges. All of them had a happy, anxious and expectant expression.”
Those who considered driving to southern Indiana were given names of Thetas to contact for advice and direction.
Those wishing to attend were instructed to make their own reservations with the hotel. Inside refers to rooms looking out over the atrium. Outside rooms had views of the grounds.
Barnes described the West Baden Springs Hotel as a “magnificent edifice placed in a setting of gardens, brilliant with flowers of varied hues.” Once in the hotel, Barnes spied a “huge circular space littered with bathtubs, wash bowls, sawdust, boxes and men everywhere hammering. Such a mess!” The line to get a room was two hours. Why? Plumbers! And a plumbers convention. And plumbers who had such a good time the night before. Some were a little too “indisposed to leave their rooms the next morning.”
The dining room that first night was filled with about 500 women. They were “laughing and chattering. Most of them were young but scattered among the bobbed, marcelled heads of the younger generation were the snow white heads of women who before us worked and strove to make Kappa Alpha Theta what is today.”
According to Barnes, the convention highlight was founder Betty Locke Hamilton. She was a “small unassuming woman to whom five hundred women extended a most since welcome by applauding and asking for a speech until she assented.” Barnes added, “Speaking merely as an onlooker I would say that she is friendly, determined, gracious, unpretentious and full of fun. I know this last quality because of the twinkle in her eye and then during the banquet procession, after we had walked a long time, I distinctly her say ‘If they don’t give me some food pretty soon I’ll never get there.'”
The West Baden Springs Hotel would close during the early days of the Great Depression. It would fall into ruin and be rebuilt in the early 2000s. Today it a wondrous place. All rooms have bathing facilities and running water and room prices have increased substantially.
The world has changed greatly in the 100 years since Barnes wrote her report for the Theta magazine. Yet, her summation of a convention is as true today as it was then. The final banquet was a “beautiful affair with its bright decorations and pretty faces and frocks, yet over all is an air of sadness. The sadness of farewell. You listen to the toasts, the songs, glance around and wonder if you will ever see these faces again. And as you pass out singing the Recessional there is a lump in your throat and a heaviness of heart. Yet with the bitter there is the sweet and the thought comes of another convention in two years and the resolution that you’ll be there if possible. Thus is convention.”