Tau Delta Phi, Syracuse University, and Floyd Little

A belated Founders’ Day to Tau Delta Phi. It was founded on June 22, 1910 as Phi Sigma Beta, a high school fraternity at DeWitt Clinton High School in New York City. At that time, DeWitt Clinton High School was a male-only school. In 1914, the fraternity took on the name Tau Delta Phi and established chapters simultaneously at the City College of New York, the New York College of Dentistry, and New York University.

Crest for Tau Delta Phi Fraternity

At its founding, the fraternity was open to Jewish men. In 1945, the membership clause was lifted and membership was open to men of all races, colors, creed, national origin, or religious beliefs. In the 1960s, the traditionally Jewish fraternities were the first to open their membership to African Americans.

One of the members of the chapter at Syracuse University was Floyd Little, a football player. Little graduated from Hillhouse High School in New Haven, Connecticut,, having taken mainly vocational classes. He then spent two years at a prep school to get him ready for college. A November 1966 Boys’ Life magazine article profiling Little stated. “Even at the ripe old age of 24. Little has his eye fixed on the future. A ‘B’ student in Liberal Arts, he is concentrating on history, public relations and physical education, not to mention Joyce Green, an attractive speech major who wears his Tau Delta Phi fraternity pin.” (Little and Green eventually married and had two daughters. They later divorced.)

At Syracuse, Little, a running back who wore Syracuse’s legendary number 44, was a three-time All-American. In 1967, he became the first first-round draft pick to sign with the Denver Broncos of the American Football League. Little was inducted into the Football Hall of Fame in 2010.

floyd little© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in College Athletics, Fran Favorite, Syracuse University, Tau Delta Phi | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Tau Delta Phi, Syracuse University, and Floyd Little

The “Shant” on Delta Kappa Epsilon’s Founding Day

On June 22, 1844, in room 12 of Old South Hall, 15 Yale College* students from the Class of 1846 organized Delta Kappa Epsilon. The fifteen founders are William Woodruff Atwater, Edward Griffin Bartlett, Frederic Peter Bellinger, Jr., Henry Case, George Foote Chester, John Butler Conyngham, Thomas Isaac Franklin, William Walter Horton, William Boyd Jacobs, Edward VanSchoonhoven Kinsley, Chester Newell Righter, Elisha Bacon Shapleigh, Thomas DuBois Sherwood, Albert Everett Stetson, and Orson William Stow.  Bartlett later wrote about the founding and the ideal DKE man, “one who combined in the most equal proportions the gentleman, the scholar, and the jolly good fellow.”

At its beginning, it was founded with the intention of being only an organization at Yale. However, a few months later, a second chapter was founded at Bowdoin College. The chapter at Yale took on the Phi designation and the Bowdoin chapter became Theta. The first convention took place in 1846 in New Haven.

Having lived in Ann Arbor, Michigan, for a few years in the 1980s, I recall walking by the DKE “Shant” at 611½ William Street. It was a narrow building of Gothic design sandwiched between two store fronts and protected by a eight-foot high brick wall. One could see the building by peering through the locked metal gate. Friends who attended Michigan decades ago tell me that they attended parties at the Shant.

An early photo of the DKE Shant

An early photo of the DKE Shant

A while back, I was invited to speak at the 125th anniversary of the Michigan Beta chapter of Pi Beta Phi and when I knew I would be in Ann Arbor, I asked if it might be possible to arrange a tour of the Shant. It is now the headquarters of Delta Kappa Epsilon. I cannot tell you how thrilling it was to tour the building which had captured my attention all those years ago.

The Omicron chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon was founded at Michigan in 1855. The Shant’s cornerstone was laid in 1878. The building was designed by William LeBaron Jenney, a Chicago architect who commuted to Ann Arbor. He founded and taught in the University’s architecture program. In 1884, he designed the first skyscraper built, the ten-story Home Insurance Building in Chicago.

In the spring of 1879, the members of the Omicron chapter dedicated the building and it was used as a temple and a meeting place for the chapter. In the early 2000s, the building’s ownership changed from the Omicron chapter to DKE’s Rampant Lion Foundation. In 2004, the building became the home of the fraternity’s national headquarters.

LIKE A TINY FORT ON WILLIAM BETWEEN MAYNARD AND STATE STREETS, WILLIAM JENNEY’S “TEMPLE,” SINCE NICKNAMED “THE SHANT,”  HOLDS COURT BEHIND A BRICK WALL AND A LOCKED GATE. (PHOTO: D. HOLDSHIP.)

The DKE Shant  (Photo by  D. Holdship)

One of the items on display is a Cuban cigar box, a favor of the 1920 DKE Convention held in Cuba. Cuba’s President at the time, Mario García Menocal, was an alumnus of DKE’s Cornell University chapter. (See http://wp.me/p20I1i-SG)

deke cigar boxcigar box closed

President Gerald R. Ford was initiated into the Omicron chapter. He has two bricks in the small courtyard.

090109_NEW_DKE_AJC_01

*Yale College was renamed Yale University in 1864.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Delta Kappa Epsilon, Fran Favorite, University of Michigan | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on The “Shant” on Delta Kappa Epsilon’s Founding Day

Condolences, With Heartfelt Sympathy

I offer my heartfelt condolences to the friends and families of those whose lives were senselessly taken at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina on the evening of Wednesday, June 17, 2015. A heartbreaking tragedy shatters more lives than the ones taken and words fail me.

Nine of the church’s parishioners were killed: Honorable Reverend Clementa Pinckney; Reverend Sharonda Coleman-Singleton; Cynthia Graham-Hurd; Reverend Myra Thompson; Reverend Dr. Daniel Lee Simmons, Sr.; Susie Jackson; Ethel Lance; Reverend DePayne Middleton-Doctor; and Tywanza Sanders. Five of them were members of National Pan-Hellenic Council fraternities and sororities.

The Honorable Reverend Clementa Pinckney, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., was a South Carolina state senator and pastor of the Emanuel AME Church. In 1996, at age 23, he was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives. Four years later, he became a South Carolina State Senator representing Jasper, Beaufort, Charleston, Colleton and Hampton counties.

Reverend Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., was the head coach of the girls’ track and field and a speech/ language pathologist at Goose Creek High School.

Cynthia Graham-Hurd, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., spent 31 years working for the Charleston County Public Library system. She served as branch manager of the John L. Dart Branch from 1990-2011 and was currently manager of the St. Andrews Regional Library.

Reverend Myra Thompson, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

Reverend Dr. Daniel Lee Simmons, Sr., Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc.

Emanuel AME Church (from the church's website)

Emanuel AME Church (from the church’s website)

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Alpha Kappa Alpha, Alpha Phi Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, Fran Favorite, National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC), Phi Beta Sigma | Tagged | Comments Off on Condolences, With Heartfelt Sympathy

Interfraternity Institute, Sigma Alpha Iota, and Omega Phi Alpha

Right now, at the Columbia Club in downtown Indianapolis, the Interfraternity Institute (IFI) is taking place. It runs from June 15-18, 2015 and it is a unique opportunity for campus-based and headquarters professionals with less than five years professional experience to further their commitment to  fraternity/sorority life. The mission of IFI is to develop “informed, committed and connected leadership, grounded in purpose and principle for the fraternity/sorority life movement.”

The Fraternity Executives Association coordinates IFI and this history is included on the FEA website:

In 1970, Richard R. “Dick” Fletcher, Executive Secretary of Sigma Nu Fraternity, in his role as President of the College Fraternity Secretaries Association (predecessor name of the Fraternity Executives Association) discussed with then-Sigma Nu Fraternity Regent (national president) Herman B Wells who was Indiana University Chancellor the need for greater communication, understanding and collaboration between fraternity deans and fraternity professionals. The idea was conceived of a “one-week academic workshop” for college student affairs personnel and inter/national fraternity staff personnel. Since more new deans seemed to have less fraternal and management experience, it was proposed to hold the workshop in a campus fraternal housing setting and to plan a curriculum that emphasized executive leadership development. After gaining support for the concept from the board of directors of the College Fraternity Secretaries Association, Mr. Fletcher asked Chancellor Wells to host the first program at Indiana University. Chancellor Wells in turn asked Dr. Robert Shaffer, Indiana University Dean of Students and a member of Sigma Chi, to serve as Dean of the Institute and members of his staff, Dr. Thomas Schreck, a member of Phi Sigma Kappa and Dr. Herbert Smith, a member of Delta Upsilon, to design and manage the program. Thus was born the first Interfraternity Institute (IFI), which took place in June 1970 with 37 students and 12 faculty members.

Since that time, the Fraternity Executives Association, in partnership with the Indiana University department of student affairs, has conducted the Interfraternity Institute annually through 2013, each summer, on the campus of Indiana University. Over the course of 42 Institutes, more than 2,000 college student affairs personnel and inter/national fraternity staff personnel, and their related institutions, have benefited from the Institute’s unique program which is focused on topics of fraternal concern and collaboration between Greek organizations and host institutions.

For 2015, the Fraternity Executives Association and the University of Illinois have partnered to develop the Infraternity Institute. 

A very early IFI brochure (Courtesy of the Stduent Life and Culture Archives at the University of Illinoi)

A very early IFI brochure (Courtesy of the Student Life and Culture Archives at the University of Illinois)

***

I’m late with two Founders’ Day greetings

June 12, 1903 – Sigma Alpha Iota

Sigma Alpha Iota, a social organization for women with a special interest in music, was founded on June 12, 1903 at the University of Michigan’s School of Music.  It was incorporated in the State of Michigan on December 1, 1904.

Its founders are Elizabeth Campbell, Frances Caspari, Minnie Davis [Sherrill], Leila Farlin [Laughlin], Nora Crane Hunt, Georgina Potts, and Mary Storrs [Andersen]. June 12, 1903 was Commencement Day. Four of the founders were graduating that evening, two were leaving for graduate study, and one, Davis, was a young faculty member.

The seven young women met at Campbell’s home in the afternoon. They solemnly pledged themselves “to help each other with sisterly affection, to stand for the highest musical scholarship, for nobility and uprightness of character and for the maintenance of friendly and unselfish relations among women in the musical profession.” This event culminated a process that began earlier that spring when Fredreka Howland, wife of William Howland, head of the Vocal Department, sowed the seeds of the idea for the organization. She became the Sigma Alpha Iota’s first patroness.  Davis served as its first president.

Sigma Alpha Iota promotes “interaction among those who share a commitment to music.” Sigma Alpha Iota is a member of the Professional Fraternity Association, and its members can also have membership in a National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) organization. In 1981, Sigma Alpha Iota received an exemption from Title IX of the Educational Amendments of 1972 to remain single sex.

In 1918, Sigma Alpha Iota funded the building of Pan’s Cottage, a two story house that can accommodate 12 artists in residence at the MacDowell Colony for Creative Artists in Peterborough, New Hampshire. It is still one of SAI’s philanthropic endeavors. SAI has also helped fund other endeavors at the MacDowell Colony.

Pan's Cottage, MacDowell Colony for the Creative Arts

June 15, 1967 – Omega Phi Alpha

On June 15, 1967, Omega Phi Alpha, a national service fraternity was founded, but its roots go back to 1953. That is when Alpha Phi Omega’s Zeta Kappa chapter at Bowling Green University helped form an organization for women similar to their own fraternity, which was then all-male. Until 1968, members were required to have been former Girl Scouts or Campfire Girls. In 1958, another chapter was founded at Eastern Michigan University. It was followed by a third at the University of Bridgeport in 1962.

In 1966, plans were underway for the three groups to meet at a convention in Bowling Green. When they came together, they offiicially became a national organization. The chapter at Bowling Green took on the title of Alpha chapter. A fourth chapter was founded at Texas A&M University in 1970.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Fran Favorite | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Interfraternity Institute, Sigma Alpha Iota, and Omega Phi Alpha

Off to the P.E.O. State Chapter Convention!

It’s the time of year when State/Provinces/Districts (S/P/D) of the P.E.O. Sisterhood have their conventions. The main purpose of the S/P/D convention is to transact the business of the S/P/D. It’s also a time for the making new friends, the continuing of the left over conversations of old friends, and a way to energize the membership. For the last six months, I have been serving as the Convention Registrar of the Illinois State Chapter of the P.E.O. Sisterhood. 

It has been a learning experience and I had the opportunity to continue my love/hate relationship with an Access database. It has challenged me and through it I have been able to serve the organization.

I leave for convention tomorrow. Currently I am waiting for phone calls from convention attendees who will be notified that they are staying at the overflow hotel. Calls will be referred to me.  Although the overflow hotel can be reached by walking through a short corridor to the back of the main hotel and walking about 100 steps away, I know that some of the women will feel like we are putting them in Siberia. I can understand that feeling. I hope I can make them feel ok with the situation. Both hotels are quite nice, so that is a positive, too. The overflow hotel is one of my favorite chains, so it’s easy for me to talk it up.

But frankly, my attitude has always been that almost nothing is earth shattering. If you don’t tell people that things aren’t going exactly as planned and don’t show negative feelings about it, it really won’t be a problem. Things become problems when people make them problems. I want people to leave with a smile on their face feeling that the time they were there was well spent.

The 2015 Convention logo of the Illinois State Chapter

The 2015 Convention logo of the Illinois State Chapter

It’s what I used to tell recruitment chairmen when I was advising chapters. As sorority recruitment season comes around, there will some Recruitment Chair-zillas, the ones who demand everything be “PERFECT.” In making a big deal about the small imperfections, a toxic energy is produced and it can chill to the bones. Attendees know something is amiss. Doing the best we can with what we have is sometimes all that we can do. There are so many things that people expend needless time and energy on, that, in the end, don’t really matter.

I know that the next four days will be filled with challenges and choices and I hope that I can serve the Illinois State Chapter well. I hope the odds are with me.

The Executive Board of the Ohio State Chapter of P.E.O. The talented one playing "Big Red" is the amazing, talented and fun Kylie Towers Smith, Kappa Kappa Gamma's Archivist.

The 2014-15 Executive Board of the Ohio State Chapter of P.E.O. The one playing “Big Red” is the amazing, talented, and fun Kylie Towers Smith, Kappa Kappa Gamma’s Archivist.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Fran Favorite, Kappa Kappa Gamma, P.E.O. | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Off to the P.E.O. State Chapter Convention!

Alpha Chi Rho, Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians, and the Blendor

On June 4, 1895, Alpha Chi Rho was founded at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. Its founders include a father and son, likely the only father-son founders of any North-American Interfraternity Conference fraternity. The founders of Alpha Chi Rho are the Reverend Paul Ziegler, his son Carl Ziegler, William H. Rouse, Herbert T. Sherriff, and William A.D. Eardeley.

Fred Waring became a member of the Alpha Chi Rho chapter at Pennsylvania State University in 1918. Waring studied architectural engineering but he came from a family blessed with musical talents. He appeared on stage for the first time at age five and he served as the leader of the local Boy Scout Fife and Drum Corp. In high school, he, his brother, Tom, and friends Freddie Buck and Poley McClintock formed the Waring-McClintock Snap Orchestra. They played at local dances. The name was changed to Waring’s Banjo Orchestra and it was often featured at fraternity parties.

In 1922, during his senior year, the band, which now had ten people in it, was known as Waring’s Pennsylvanians. He stopped playing the banjo in the performances and concentrated on being the bandleader and booking the performances. He left school before graduation, with the blessing of PSU’s Dean of Men, to concentrate on his love of music.

waring1

The band made the trek from State College to Ann Arbor, Michigan, in March 1922. Waring and his Pennsylvanians were on the bill at the University of Michigan’s annual J-Hop. Althought they did not headline the dance, they were well received and were invited to perform on a Detroit radio station, in the days when radio stations had live musical performances. They quickly became a part of the midwest Vaudeville circuit. About a year later, they made their way to the west coast. They signed with Victor Records and for nine years were among the label’s best selling performers. In 1932, the band quit recording preferring to perform solely on radio and in person. Waring added singers to his ensemble. At some point, the group went back to making records.

waring

In 1936, Frederick J. Osius met Waring after a radio performance, and discussed with him the idea he had for an emulsifying machine which Orius had patented in 1933. The idea intrigued Waring and he agreed to help develop and promote it. Waring’s engineering skills came into play and through study of Osius’ protoype, Waring helped refine it. The Waring Mixer, as it was fist known, became the Waring Blendor (yes, with an “o”) and finally the Waring Blender. According to the Waring Archives at PSU:

The members of the Pennsylvanians who played the role of collective guinea pigs for Fred’s concoctions, referred to the newly named Waring Blendor as the “thing.” It traveled with them in its own converted wardrobe trunk filled with lemon squeezer, can opener, cutting utensils, glasses, ice, strainers and measurers. It was accompanied by another trunk containing canned goods ranging from sauerkraut to mangoes.

Fred not only involved the Pennsylvanians in tasting his creations but in promoting them as well. Musicians would demonstrate the device in Macy’s, Gimbel’s or Bloomingdale’s, and tell everybody how wonderful it would be to make fresh vegetable and fruit drinks. Singer, actor and bandleader Rudy Valle also became a big promoter of the Blendor. Once Fred showed Rudy how fast and easy it was to make a frozen daiquiri with the Blendor, he became the device’s best salesmen – trying to sell it to every bartender in the United States!

waring blendor in travelling case

On June 10, 1939, the National Interfraternity Conference’s education division coordinated its first interfraternity broadcast, which aired on the National Broadcast Company. The speakers included: Sigma Nu Dr. Harry W. Chase, New York University’s Chancellor; Delta Kappa Epsilon George M. Morris, Chairman of the American Bar Association’s House of Delegates; and Delta Sigma Pi Philip A. Benson, American Banker Association’s President. Waring, as a fraternity man, and his musicians performed on the show. 

The Fred Waring Show aired on television from 1948-54. In 1947, Waring began teaching those who could teach vocal performing to others. The Fred Waring Choral Workshop helped spread choral singing throughout the country. In 1977, the Alpha Chi Rho Educational Foundation presented Waring with $1,000 to be used for scholarships to the workshop. Waring led the workshops until his death in 1984. 

P.S. This from Noraleen Young, Kappa Alpha Theta’s Archivist: Fred Waring’s daughter Dixie is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. A quick search found that she led her Beta Phi/Penn State chapter to several trophies in the 1950s in the Interfraternity-Panhellenic Council sing on that campus. After graduation she joined his group.

Photos courtesy of the PSU Waring Archives

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Alpha Chi Rho, Fran Favorite | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Alpha Chi Rho, Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians, and the Blendor

A Founding, a Competition, a Trek, a Marathon, and an Iris

On June 2, 1999, eight male students at the University of California Los Angeles founded Beta Chi Theta. Although the discussion about starting an fraternity for South Asian students had started earlier that semester, June 2 was the date the organization was officially recognized by and became a member of the UCLA Interfraternity Council. The National Founding Fathers are: Abu Abraham; Hashu Datwani; Samir Khandhar; Ankur Kumar; Ashish Nagdev; Ankur Parikh; Roshan Patel; Ali Zhumkhawala. A year later, a second chapter was established at Baylor University.

***

The 2015 state contests for the Miss America 2016 competition have begun. Of the six states which have picked winners (RI, ME, VT, HI, WY, NH), two of them are sorority women as far as I can tell. I will update the page as information becomes available. The post it at http://wp.me/P20I1i-2bN.

***

Congratulations to Chi Omega Harriette Thompson, a Dickinson College alumna. She began running marathons when she was in her 70s. This past Sunday, at the Rock ‘n Roll Marathon in San Diego, the 92-year-old cancer survivor became the oldest woman to finish a marathon. Her time? It was 7 hours, 24 minutes, 36 seconds. 

***

Yesterday, June 1, 2015, a group of Alpha Tau Omegas began marching from New Market to Lexington Virginia. It is the reverse of a trek 257 Virginia Military Institute cadets began on May 11, 1864. Four days later, on May 15, 1864, the cadets fought in the Battle of New Market. On September 11, 1865, three of those cadets, Otis Allan Glazebrook, Erskine Mayo Ross and Alfred Marshall, founded Alpha Tau Omega. The march is part of the fraternity’s 150th celebration.

***

A quick trip to Monmouth, Illinois happened to be when iris was in bloom. An iris from Stewart House, where it all began for Kappa Kappa Gamma.

A quick trip to Monmouth, Illinois happened to be when iris was in bloom. An iris from Stewart House, where it all began for Kappa Kappa Gamma.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Alpha Tau Omega, Chi Omega, Fran Favorite, Kappa Kappa Gamma, University of California Los Angeles, Virginia Military Institute | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on A Founding, a Competition, a Trek, a Marathon, and an Iris

Zeta Psi and Fred Nymeyer, a Dedicated Illini

Zeta Psi was founded on June 1, 1847 at New York University. John Bradt Yates Sommers, John Moon Skillman, and William Henry Dayton are its founders. The NYU chapter is the Phi chapter. 

In trying to figure out what to write about relating to Zeta Psi, I took a look at the fraternity’s website. I could have written about Zeta Psi alumnus Dick Wolf, creator of the Law and Order franchise, but that would likely have meant me wanting to delve into the fictional Hudson University, the site of some of the episodes. Ian Murray of the popular Vineyard Vines collection was another option. And then there was Harold “Red” Grange, the “Galloping Ghost” of University of Illinois football fame.

It was another University of Illinois Zeta Psi who intrigued me the most. He dedicated himself to the fraternity he so loved, and was an integral part of it for almost all of his adult life. The Zeta Psis who were initiated members during his time of service are growing fewer by the day and will soon be no more. That is the way our organizations work. Those who lead the organization and give unstintingly of themselves are replaced by others who do the same; in time names are consigned to the pages of a history book. On this Zeta Psi Founders’ Day, let us remember Zeta Psi Fred Henry “Fritz” Nymeyer. 

Nymeyer was born in 1885 in the Netherlands and was prepared for college in Goshen, Indiana. He enrolled at the University of Illinois at the age of 23. He became a member of the Comus Club. The club was granted a charter at the 1908 Zeta Psi convention and it became the fraternity’s Alpha Epsilon chapter in 1909. Nymeyer was president of the senior class and a member of the debate team, among other activities. He graduated from the University of Illinois in 1911. 

zeta psi badge

After graduation, he succeeded Harold Gould as travelling secretary and editor of The Circle of Zeta Psi, a magazine which began publication in 1909. In June 1911, Nymeyer traveled to Gould’s home to collect the fraternity’s materials. He then headed east to New Brunswick, New Jersey, where he set  up Zeta Psi’s Central Office in a factory belonging to Zete Herbert M. Waldron. In the factory, he edited the April, May and June issues of the fraternity’s magazine. After the June issue was finished, he moved the Central Office to a small room in the Metropolitan Life Building. located at 1 Madison Avenue in New York City. He served as travelling secretary and then general secretary for eight years.

The Metropolitan Life Insurance Building, as it looked in 1911 when Zeta Psi Central Office was located in a one-room office there.

The Metropolitan Life Building, as it looked in 1911 when Zeta Psi Central Office was located in a one-room office there.

He was in attendance at the third meeting of the National Interfraternity Conference which took place in December 1911 at the University Club in New York City. He was part of a panel discussion on the “Traveling Secretary” along with Francis W, Shepardson (Beta Theta Pi), W. Fairfield Peterson (Alpha Delta Phi), Sheldon J. Howe (Delta Upsilon), James Anderson Hawes (Delta Kappa Epsilon), and F.N. Compton (Theta Delta Chi ). It was noted that the speakers were the “secretaries of their respective fraternities and do more or less traveling so that the discussion had many interesting and valuable phases and will be reported more fully later.” Nymeyer would later serve on the NIC’s executive board and became chair in 1920.

On April 17, 1912, he married Grace Crowell in their hometown of Goshen, Indiana. The 1920 edition of the Illini News stated the Nymeyer was a member of the New York Stock Exchange, editor of The Circle of Zeta Psi and general secretary of that fraternity. In 1919, he left the employ of Zeta Psi, according to a history of Zeta Psi, but remained a loyal member. In 1938, he rejoined the staff to help counter some of the effects the depression was having on the fraternity. He became the fraternity’s first executive secretary and then educational director.  He served until 1943, when ill health forced him to retire. He died in 1944.

I found this on a blog about Bed and Breakfasts (although this particular B&B is no longer in business), “Come enjoy the country and our English country manor style home. Situated on twelve acres of grass, shade trees, flowers, meadowland and woods, Prairie Manor was built in 1925, by Fred and Grace Nymeyer who grew up in Goshen. When Fred went away to college his roommate became ill and had to drop out. Fred helped care for his roommate and at graduation he received a gift from his roommate’s father–a seat on the Wall Street Stock Exchange. Fred and Grace moved to NYC where Fred became a Wall Street banker. They came back to Goshen often to visit family and finally decided to move back to retire. Julius Gregory, a NYC architect, designed Prairie Manor. He was known as one of the first transitional architects, mixing architectural styles. The living room replicates the builder’s favorite painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art–an English baronial hall featuring a fireplace big enough to walk into. Mrs. Nymeyer’s favorite painting of a chapel inspired the twenty foot high Bombe window. The house has a third floor that at one time was called the ballroom. This is where the Nymeyer’s many guests did their dancing.” According to public records, the home has 6 bedrooms, 3 baths, and approximately 6,240 square feet and was built in 1929. The architect, Julius Gregory, was an initiate of the University of California chapter of Zeta Psi. His office was in New York City.

Nymeyer's former home in Gosehn, Indiana. It was designed by architect Julius Gregory, a Zeta Psi.

Nymeyer’s former home in Gosehn, Indiana. It was designed by architect Julius Gregory, a Zeta Psi.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Founders' Day, Fran Favorite, New York University, University of Illinois, Zeta Psi | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Zeta Psi and Fred Nymeyer, a Dedicated Illini

On Alpha Gamma Delta’s Founding Day, a Wedding

Alpha Gamma Delta was founded at Syracuse University on May 30, 1904 at the home of Dr. Wellesley Perry Coddington, a Syracuse University professor.  It is the youngest of the Syracuse Triad, the three National Panhellenic Conference organizations founded at Syracuse University. The other two, Alpha Phi and Gamma Phi Beta, were founded in 1872 and 1874, respectively.

By 1901, all seven of the founding National Panhellenic Conference organizations had chapters at Syracuse. Dr. Coddington felt that the campus needed another women’s fraternity. He approached several young female students and discussions ensued. Though excitement started to grow, the women managed to keep very quiet the possibility of another organization on campus. Edith MacConnell was recovering from a serious accident and was a patient at the Homeopathic Hospital. Not even the nurses attending to her had any idea what was taking place, despite the steady stream of visitors to her room.

The announcement in the Daily Orange, the school’s newspaper, noted, “A new Greek-letter fraternity has been organized among the women of the university. The name is Alpha Gamma Delta and the members thus far are: Marguerite Shepard, ’05; Jennie C. Titus, ’05; Georgia Otis, ’06; Ethel E. Brown, ’06; Flora M. Knight, ’06, Estelle Shepard, ’06; Emily H. Butterfield, ’07; Edith MacConnell, ’07; Grace R. Mosher, ’07; Mary L. Snider, ’07.”

Emily H. Butterfield

Four of the Alpha Gamma Delta Founders are in this picture.

One hundred years ago, Ruth Pauline Evans, Alpha Gamma Delta’s Second Vice President, had just become Mrs. Earl Stanton Ramharter. An alumna of the University of Washington chapter, on February 25, 1911, she was initiated by the chapter there. In addition to her Alpha Gam duties, she taught domestic science at Stadium High School in Tacoma, Washington.

The editor of the Alpha Gama Delta Quarterly, Edith V. Sage, wrote in the May 1915 issue, “We are interested in the lovely wedding of our second Grand Vice President and National Scholarship Officer, Ruth Evans, whom we will greet at Convention as Mrs. Earl Stanton Ramharter of Oakes, North Dakota. Jane Williams writes the news of the sweetest prettiest afternoon wedding at the home of Ruth’s brother, Mr Llewellyn Evans, April seventeenth in Tacoma, Wash.” Williams wrote of the ceremony:

The house was a veritable bower of dogwood and wild cherry blossoms, interspersed with baskets of yellow daisies. Mrs. Evans was assisted by Ruth’s sister, Helen, and Mrs. Clara Wilt. For years Marie Gabel has promised to sing Because for Ruth, whenever her day should be, and while she rendered it in the dear sweet way she has, accompanied by Alice Gottfeldt, the bridal party entered. I was Ruth’s bridesmaid and my gown was yellow crepe de Chine and cream colored lace, and my shower bouquet was of lavender and pink sweet peas. Next came Virginia Evans, Ruth’s cousin, the maid of honor. Her gown was old gold velvet and gold lace over flesh-colored satin and she carried a shower bouquet of lavender and white sweet peas. Ruth’s father gave her away. She looked perfectly darling in her hand embroidered, imported gown, which blended mistily with her beautiful shower bouquet of white roses and lilies-of-the-valley. The simple service was read by Professor George Huntington, her cousin, in a bower of cherry blossoms where she was met by the groom and his best man, R.L. Bush of Kent, Montana. As soon as the benediction was pronounced and congratulations were being received the Alpha Gamma Delta girls sang the Rose Song.

A number of the chapter girls assisted in the dining room. Clare Criswell cut the bridal cake, and discovered the ring. Happy omen! But Helen Littell found the button.

After donning her trim little traveling suit, and hat, Ruth threw her bouquet, which Clare Criswell and Elsie Quilliam both claim to have caught. After making brief visits in Minneapolis and Stillwater, Minn., Ruth and Earl will be at home in Oakes, N. Dak. It has been a pretty busy spring for Ruth with her trip to California to install Omicron and her own preparations. Mr. Ramharter is a Cornell man so they have many interests in common.

Ruth Pauline Evans as a student at the University of Washington courtesy of UW)

Ruth Pauline Evans as a student at the University of Washington (courtesy of UW)

Happy Founders’ Day, Alpha Gamma Delta!

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Alpha Gamma Delta, Fran Favorite, Syracuse University, University of Washington | Comments Off on On Alpha Gamma Delta’s Founding Day, a Wedding

Awards, a Special Teacher, and Sally Ride

The local newspaper’s Monday edition is usually very light on news. This week, because Monday was a holiday and the newspaper was not published, Tuesday’s paper was like a Monday edition. Usually this annoys me, but when I opened the paper and saw the news on page 3, I couldn’t help but smile. The newspaper which isn’t friendly to Greek-letter organizations, devoted a good part of the page to the news about David Lynch’s award from the North-American Interfraternity Conference (NIC). I suspect that had more to do with the fact that no staff time was spent writing the story than a change of heart about GLOs. I am not complaining. Positive press is positive press, after all, and Lynch is most deserving of the award. He also was named the Lincoln Academy of Illinois’ Student Laureate for Southern Illinois University Carbondale and was the recipient of the Service to Southern Award, SIUC’s top student award. These are just a few of his many honors. (The newspaper story is at http://thesouthern.com/news/local/education/david-lynch-earns-national-undergraduate-award/article_95e9df2d-a307-50a9-839e-6c3321e62701.html.)

The Lincoln Academy of Illinois presents the award annually to one distinguished senior at each of Illinois’ four-year colleges and universities, as well as to one student from each of the state’s community colleges.  Photo courtesy of  SIUC

David Lynch with  the Lincoln Academy of Illinois medal and certificate. (Photo courtesy of SIUC)

 

Nine fraternity men won the North-American Interfraternity Conference’s 2015 Undergraduate Award of Distinction. They are:

Anish Sharma, Sigma Nu , University of Mississippi

Anthony Naquin, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Nicholls State University

David Lynch, Kappa Alpha Order, Southern Illinois University – Carbondale

Elliott Wiegman, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Jeremy Terman, Sigma Chi, University of Missouri

Jesse Brown, Kappa Alpha Order, Midwestern State University

Rep. Joseph Sweeney, Phi Mu Delta, University of New Hampshire (Yes, the Rep. title is correct. Sweeney is a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives representing the 8th District of Rockingham County.)

Logan Stanger, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Ball State University

Marlan J. Golden, Alpha Tau Omega, University of Alabama

***

Yesterday, was the birthday of Sally Ride, the first American woman in space. She was the subject of the google doodle. A number of people searched for Ride’s sorority affiliation and ended up on my blog. Contrary to the rumor that will never die, she was not a sorority woman. She went to Swarthmore and Stanford at a time when there weren’t sororities at either institution. Here is the list of astronauts who are sorority women. http://wp.me/p20I1i-le, in case anyone is interested.

***

Kelli O’Hara and Kristin Chenoweth are Gamma Phi Betas. They were initiated into the chapter at Oklahoma City University. They are in competition with each other for this year’s Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical Tony Award. O’Hara is nominated for her role in The King and I, Chenoweth for her performance in On the Twentieth Century. At OCU, both women were students of Dr. Florence Gillam Birdwell.  In 2004, Birdwell was named a Member Laureate of Sigma Alpha Iota, an international women’s music fraternity. The New York Times recently published a story on Birdwell. The article is at http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/26/theater/for-kristin-chenoweth-and-kelli-ohara-a-fearsome-fairy-godmother.html?partner=socialflow&smid=tw-nytimes&_r=0

pink carnation

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2015. All Rights Reserved. If  you enjoyed this post, please sign up for updates. Also follow me on twitter @GLOHistory and Pinterest www.pinterest.com/glohistory/

Posted in Fran Favorite, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Order, Sigma Alpha Iota, Southern Illinois University Carbondale | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Awards, a Special Teacher, and Sally Ride