Kappa Delta’s Presidential Connection on Its Founders’ Day

Kappa Delta was founded on October 23, 1897 at the State Female Normal School (now Longwood University) in Farmville, Virginia. Its founders are Lenora Ashmore Blackiston, Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson, Sara Turner White and Mary Sommerville Sparks Hendrick. Kappa Delta, along with Zeta Tau Alpha, Sigma Sigma Sigma and Alpha Sigma Alpha, were founded at the same institution and comprise the “Farmville Four.” (Two of them joined the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) and the other two became members of the Association of Education Sororities (AES) – before AES members became a part of NPC but that is a story for another day.)

Kappa Delta is likely the only National Panhellenic Conference organization that can claim a U.S. President’s granddaughter as a founder. Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson’s grandfather was John Tyler. Her father was the President of the College of William and Mary. She designed Kappa Delta’s badge. Wilson spent an additional year in Farmville and then transferred to Dana Hall in Massachusetts. There she prepared to enter Wellesley College. She graduated from Wellesley in 1904.

Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson

Of the other three Kappa Delta founders, only Hendrick played a major role in helping the organization grow. Blackiston transferred to Randolph-Macon Women’s College shortly after Kappa Delta was founded. White did not return after her first year.

The Eta Chapter of Kappa Delta was installed in 1913 at the Normal College of the City of New York. That name threw me for a second. “The college is readily accessible, because it is situated at 68 Street and Park Avenue, in the heart of New York City,” according to a description in The Angelos of Kappa Delta. It took me a minute to realize that it must be Hunter College, and indeed it was. The name was changed in 1914 to honor its first president, Thomas Hunter. The school also took on more majors than teaching, so the chapter did not get caught up in the NPC/AES distinction.

The charter members of the Eta Chapter of Kappa Delta

The charter members of the Eta Chapter of Kappa Delta

I saw this picture and I knew I had to include it somehow. The members of the Eta Chapter are displayed in the shape of an Eta,  The chapter closed in 1964.

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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/

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Col. William E. Berry, a Life Loyal ATO

Colonel William E. Berry died on October 20, 2016 at the age of 88. Sometimes when I am wading through fraternity history, certain people intrigue me. Berry was one of those whom I could not help but admire. I was in awe of his service to Alpha Tau Omega.

When he became a member of the Delta Psi Chapter at the University of Mississippi in the fall of 1948, Alpha Tau Omega had but few awards it presented at each Congress. The most prestigious of these was the Thomas Arkle Clark Award, named for the Dean of Men at the University of Illinois. Clark is another of the fraternity men I admire and how fitting it was when Berry was named the National Thomas Arkle Clark Award winner.

The caption from the Fall 1962 Palm of Alpha Tau Omega reads, "

The caption from the September 1952 Palm of Alpha Tau Omega reads, “Billy E. Berry, Mississippi ’52, received Thomas Arkle Clark Award from Educational Adviser Abbott as W.G.C. Vann watches.

A full page article appeared in the September 1952 Palm of Alpha Tau Omega.

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After graduation, Berry served his country.  In the U.S. Army, he saw tours of duty in Japan, Germany and the United States. As a White House Aide during his tenure as Assistant Adjutant General in the Pentagon, he was, on occasion, the Army officer standing behind President Kennedy in a receiving line. At President Kennedy’s funeral, he was at Mrs. Kennedy’s side as she acknowledged official guests to the White House.

The obituary on the ATO website noted:

Bill went on to serve as Advisor to the Adjutant General in Vietnam, Senior Advisor and Consultant to the Republic of Vietnam, Armed Forces Adjutant General, Joint General Staff, Saigon and concurrently Chief of the Adjutant General Advisory Branch, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam; Deputy Adjutant General, US Army, Headquarters, Pacific in Hawaii.  In 1974 Bill was named Deputy Commandant, US Army Institute of Administration, Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana.   By 1975 Bill was a full Colonel and on a glide path to becoming General William E. Berry.  

But 1975 was also the year his beloved ATO called him back into service.  The National Fraternity had just emerged from a tumultuous half-decade and was looking for steady leadership.   Bill became the Fraternity’s 30th National President. He felt strongly that to give ATO the attention he believed it needed, would require him to retire from the Army and walk away from the honor of becoming a General in the Army.  

Bill said that the choice was not really that difficult because he believed he could influence so many more young men in ATO then he would have been able to as an Army General.  He was right.  Scores of ATOs over many generations of colleges students have benefitted from Bill’s leadership and wisdom.  That is especially true of the thousands of men who joined ATO at Ole Miss.  

 

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From the December 1975 Palm of Alpha Tau Omega

The following paragraph speaks volumes, not just about ATO, but all our GLOs:

For if we truly subscribe to virtue, then we will seek moral excellence. If we really believe in truth, then we will remain true to ourselves, true to our vows, and true to the values that give meaning to men’s lives. And if we honestly love, then for our Brothers, one and all, we will show tolerance, forebearance, compassion, and understanding, even amidst controversy or crisis.

 

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Elkhart, Illinois, Remembers a Sigma Chi

The Elkhart, Illinois, exit off of I-55 in Illinois, just north of Springfield, has intrigued me ever since I wrote a history of Sigma Chi’s Kappa Kappa Chapter at the University of Illinois. For five seasons of football games at Knox College and countless trips to Monmouth, Illinois, the sign for Elkhart brings to mind Garland “Jake” Stahl, an outstanding athlete and one of  the most famous of the University of Illinois’ early athletes. He was the captain of the 1902 Illini football team as well as a star on the baseball team. His nickname “Jake” was given to him by one of his Sigma Chi brothers. Stahl grew up in Elkhart.

In 1903, at a home game against Michigan, Stahl hit a game-winning homer “so hard and so high that it struck amid the upper limbs of a tree almost down to the football field.” The soft maple tree became known as the “Jake Stahl Tree” until the late 1940s when it was cut down because of advanced decay.

In 1903, after graduating, Stahl joined the Boston Red Sox as a first baseman. Later he was transferred to Washington, Chicago, New York and then back to Washington as player- manager. He went back to the Red Sox as manager.

Garland "Jake" Stahl

Garland “Jake” Stahl

In 1906, he married Jane “Jennie” Mahan, a classmate and a member of the Delta Chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta at the University of Illinois. 

Urbana Daily Courier, June 23, 1904

Urbana Daily Courier, June 23, 1904

In the off-season, Stahl worked for his father-in-law’s bank. He served in World War I. Later he became the bank’s president but his health failed. The family moved to the West Coast in an unsuccessful effort to regain his health. He died of tuberculosis on September 18, 1922; he was 43. At his interment in Chicago, his Sigma Chi chapter placed on his grave a large white cross of Sigma Chi roses.

Was he remembered in Elkhart? That was my thought each time I drove by the sign and the grain elevators to the north of the exit. This time, as I drove north for a meeting, I impulsively took the exit. I needed to know if Elkhart remembered Jake Stahl.

Looking south from the grain elevators.

Looking south from the grain elevators.

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Jake Stahl’s name is the last one on the left side of the display which appears on a sign in a green space next to the one-block long business district.

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Of course, one can find a Lincoln connection.

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Another Lincoln connection

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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/

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Who’s in the Photo?

Last week Facebook reminded me that it had been a year since I posted this photo.

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A year!! How could that be? Then I remembered that Carol Warren, Pi Phi’s past NPC Delegate asked me if I ever figured out who it was. She must have asked me that in January at Pi Phi’s College Weekend. I told her I was planning to write about it soon. Time just flew. That’s my defense.

Here’s the backstory of this photo. A Delta Gamma who reads this blog alerted me to this photo for sale on eBay. The woman in it is wearing her Pi Phi arrow and a Kappa Sigma pin, but there was no further identification. It had been taken in a studio in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, home of Bucknell University. I posted the photo on my Facebook page. A few weeks later, the photo appeared in the Pi Phi archives, the gift of an unknown giver. (Thank you dear Pi Phi friend or friends who bought this photo as a surprise gift for the archives!)

This was not an easy mystery to solve and I am not sure I have the correct answer. I first searched a Kappa Sigma directory for members of the Bucknell chapter from the late 1890s to a decade or two later. Then I crossed referenced them with members of the Bucknell Pi Phi chapter and looked for married names of Pi Phis. I found three possible names of Bucknell Pi Phis who married Bucknell Kappa Sigmas.

Despite what I wrote on this envelope, I no longer think this is a picture of Sara Ray Way. My best guess is now Olive Long Haggerty.

Despite what I wrote on this envelope, I no longer think this is a picture of Sara Ray Way. My best guess is now Olive Long Haggerty.

I found photos of the Pennsylvania Beta Chapter of Pi Beta Phi circa 1908 and another one from a few years later.

The Bucknell Chapter of Pi Beta Phi

The Bucknell Chapter of Pi Beta Phi. Sara Ray is in the middle row, fourth from the left. She is wearing a Kappa Sigma pin under her arrow. I do not think the woman in the graduation gown is Sara Ray, despite what I wrote after my initial digging.

Olive Long

Olive Long is in the bottom row, fifth from the left.

Olive Long Haggerty)

Olive Long (Haggerty)

 

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On Saturday, October 15, when I was looking for more information, I learned that Olive Long married Matt Emerson Haggerty on October 15, 1919. After the marriage, she moved to California to be with her husband. This report was included in a 1921 Caduceus of Kappa Sigma, “Matt E Haggerty, Bucknell, ’09 has removed from Los Angeles, Cal. to Mill Hall, Pa. and will practice law in Lock Haven, Pa. Fred Perry says this is the only case on record of a live man leaving southern California.” The Haggertys lived the rest of their married life in Pennsylvania.

If anyone has additional information about this picture, please let me know.

Update: Some added info.

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4/20/2017 – I was completely wrong about this. Olive Haggerty’s granddaughter sent me an email yesterday, “The rest of your information about my grandmother is accurate, but the lady in the graduation picture is not Olive Haggerty. Just wanted to set the record straight.” So, folks, I am back to square one. I will try again and keep you posted. And I apologize for the misidentification.

 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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/

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Alpha Chi Omega and Zeta Tau Alpha Celebrating Founders’ Day, Baker University 100 Years Ago

October 15 is Founders’ Day for both Alpha Chi Omega and Zeta Tau Alpha. In 1885, Alpha Chi Omega was founded at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana. Thirteen years later, in 1898, Zeta Tau Alpha was founded at the State Female Normal School (now Longwood University) in Farmville, Virginia.

Alpha Chi Omega’s  seven founders, Anna Allen, Olive Burnett, Bertha Deniston, Amy DuBois, Nellie Gamble, Bessie Grooms and Estelle Leonard, were students in the DePauw School of Music. With the guidance and support of James Hamilton Howe, Dean of the School of Music, they created an organization that at its beginning insisted its members possess some musical culture. The first appearance of Alpha Chi Omega was in Meharry Hall of East College. The seven women wore scarlet and olive ribbon streamers attached to their dresses to display the organization’s colors.

Zeta Tau Alpha‘s founders are Alice Maud Jones Horner, Frances Yancey Smith, Alice Bland Coleman, Ethel Coleman Van Name, Ruby Bland Leigh Orgain, Mary Campbell Jones Batte, Helen May Crafford, Della Lewis Hundley, and Alice Grey Welsh.

For Founders’ Day, let’s take a look at a campus where Alpha Chi and Zeta installed chapters. Both organizations entered Baker University in Baldwin, Kansas, within five years of each other. The Omicron Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega was installed in 1907 and the Sigma Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha followed in 1912.

When the Nu Alpha local organization became the Omicron Chapter of Alpha Chi, Lemuel Herbert Murlin was President of Baker University. In the report of the chapter’s founding, it was reported that “Mrs. Murlin is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, and has shown a kindly interest in the installation of Omicron chapter.”*

Charter members of the Omicron Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega

Charter members of the Omicron Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega

The Delta Delta Delta chapter was chartered in 1895. The National Panhellenic Conference was established in 1902. When Alpha Chi joined Tri delta on campus, the two formed the campus Panhellenic Council. These are the Panhellenic rules as presented in a 1908 issue of The Lyre of Alpha Chi Omega.

Written invitations shall be sent out by each fraternity on Tuesday, 6:00 p. m., before Saturday, pledge day. Answers to invitation shall be expected not before Saturday.

Verbal invitations for Saturday entertainment shall be given on Wednesday morning before pledge day.

Fraternity may be discussed with rushee on Wednesday and Thursday, according to the following schedule:
Wednesday, 3:oo—6:oo p. m.—Alpha Chi Omega.
Wednesday, 7:oo—10:oo p. m.—Delta Delta Delta.
Thursday, 3 :oo—6:oo p. m.—Delta Delta Delta.
Thursday, 7 :oo—10:oo p. m.—Alpha Chi Omega..

The Delta fraternity shall entertain rushees from 1:oo to 3:30 p. m. on Saturday before December 15.
The Alpha Chi Omega fraternity shall entertain rushees from 3:30 to 7:oo p. m. on Saturday before December 15. No boys may be present at these hours of discussion.

Friday shall be Silent Day. No intercourse with rushee Friday or Saturday until hours of entertainment.

Each rushee may attend one chafing dish party aside from all night spread.

No invitations whatever except recognition of calls.

No campus rule.

Fraternity shall not make suggestions concerning their rushing to boys.

No suggestion to rushee that she might receive invitation to join fraternity.

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In February 1916, the following report appeared in The Themis of Zeta Tau Alpha:

You girls may all be glad that you are not living in Kansas at the present time because we are most of us either taking, having, or recovering from the la grippe (influenza). Are any of you having the same experience? Among a few other disagreeable things, although you may not all agree, we have had some very cold weather and the college fuel was so scarce that several classes had to be dismissed. So many of our alumnae have been to visit us this fall; I think they must have come partly through curiosity to see our new house and our new girls. Any way we enjoyed them (and their good advice) very much.

We had a very nice reception for our patronesses before Christmas; to use the expression of one of the girls, “It was formal enough that we had to wear our mitts and stand in a receiving line.” We invited a hundred ladies of the town and representatives from each of the other two sororities, which are Delta Delta Delta and Alpha Chi Omega.

One of our girls, Cornelia Grant, entered the Inter-collegiate Prohibition Contest, and although she did not win in the contest, her oration was very well given. Then, two of our girls took part in a play given by the Dramatic Class and one of them, Besse Barricklow will graduate from that department in the spring. Our semester examinations will be given in two weeks and after that we may initiate our pledges if their grades are good enough. Owing to the busy time of year and so much sickness among the girls our letter must be short but I will try and have the chapter letter more interesting the next time.

A song

A song written for the installation of the Sigma Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha.

The Alpha Chis mentioned the Zetas in their chapter report which appeared in the November 1912 Lyre:

Omicron’s Alumnae Breakfast last spring was a great success. Alpha Chi Omega songs and toasts added to the pleasure of the occasion…After the toasts were given, the girls of the class of 1915 presented a beautiful silver loving cup on which is inscribed ‘Awarded Annually to the Sisters of Highest Scholarship in Omicron Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega.’ On the opposite side the name of the girl who has the highest scholarship for each year will be engraved. We are delighted with our handsome gift.

At the close of the school year Mary Bovard and Bess Scott Linscott, both of Kansas City, Mo., were initiated into Alpha Chi Omega. The opening of college this fall found fourteen girls back. We have had some very enjoyable rushing parties, including a cafeteria supper, a one o’clock luncheon, a chafing-dish party followed by a slumber party, a Bacon Bat out at the city park, and a six o’clock dinner…We are glad to have with us Mrs. Wilson of Kansas City, Mo., as our chaperon this year.
Zeta Alpha Chapter of Phi Mu was installed June 19, at Baker University. A Panhellenic reception was held at the Zeta Tau Alpha House in honor of the new chapter.

Omicron girls are expecting to hear Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler** when she appears in concert at Lawrence, Kan., this fall. Delta Tau Delta Fraternity held its annual chicken fry October 11. A number of Omicron girls attended.

Omicron purchased a lot in a beautiful location near the campus. It is the intention of the chapter to build a fine chapter house within a few years. Plans are now under way by which the financial requirements may be met.

*Dr. Murlin, a Phi Kappa Psi, was President of Boston University when Grace Goodhue Coolidge was awarded an honorary degree. See http://wp.me/p20I1i-ck.

** Bloomfield Zeisler was an Honorary Member of Alpha Chi Omega. See http://wp.me/p20I1i-19y.

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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 Omega, Baker University, DePauw University, Fran Favorite, Longwood University, Phi Kappa Psi, The Lyre of Alpha Chi Omega, The Themis of Zeta Tau Alpha, Zeta Tau Alpha | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Alpha Chi Omega and Zeta Tau Alpha Celebrating Founders’ Day, Baker University 100 Years Ago

Dorothy Canfield Fisher and the “Kappa Aunts” on KKΓ’s Founders’ Day

Happy Founders’ Day, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Kappa Kappa Gamma’s founders are Mary Moore “Minnie” Stewart, Anna Elizabeth Willits, Susan Burley Walker, Hanna Jeanette “Jennie” Boyd, Mary Louise “Lou” Bennett,  and Martha Louisa “Lou” Stevenson. Some of the founders recalled that the organization was founded in March, 1870, but that the appearance was delayed until fall, because the badges had been difficult to procure.  Willet’s mother was the one who came up with the idea of using a key as the badge.  The first badges were made by the Bennett’s family jeweler who was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  In order to have the badges made, 12 had to be ordered at a price of $5 each.  The Kappa Kappa Gamma’s first public appearance at chapel took place on October 13, 1870 and since the 1876 Convention, October 13 has been celebrated as Founders’ Day.

At a June 1874 meeting, the Senate of Monmouth College, under pressure from some sections of the United Presbyterian Church, passed the following resolution, “It shall be unlawful for any student of the college hereafter to become a member of any secret college fraternity or to connect with any chapter of any such fraternity, and also for an active member of such fraternity to be admitted as a student in the college.” At first the resolution had little impact, but pressure from devout United Presbyterians grew. Some refused to donate money to the financially struggling institution.  In early 1878, the Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter disbanded.

On October 13, 1934, the chapter was reinstalled.  A local sorority, Kappa Alpha Sigma, became the Alpha Deuteron Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma. In between the time the Alpha Chapter was closed and Alpha Deuteron rechartered, Dorothy Canfield was initiated by the Ohio State chapter. In 1913, Lucy Allen Smart, former Editor of the Key of Kappa Kappa Gamma, wrote:

Little Dorothy Canfield, with curls down her back, entered the Ohio State University preparatory department in 1894, when her distinguished father, Dr. James H. Canfield, became president. She had known Kappas at Lincoln, where Doctor Canfield was chancellor of the University of Nebraska, and she liked them, too, and so, naturally and most fortunately for us, she was pledged to Beta Nu. The writer was a senior when Dorothy was initiated in the fall of 1896. As a student, she entered whole heartedly into the life of the chapter and into all activities of college life. The hospitable home, with big open fires in the living rooms and the studio (for Mrs. Canfield is an artist), was the scene of one delightful gathering after another. Musicales. receptions, lectures, Hallowe’en parties followed one upon the other. Especially informal and delightful were the happy times when Kappas, active and alumnae, sometimes forty strong, took possession of the executive mansion. Rare good fun we had one day when we were Dorothy’s guests for dinner and supper and a side splitting mock wedding ceremony was performed. A province convention was held in the Canfield living rooms one May. Rich, indeed, are the memories of those happy times when Dr. and Mrs. Canfield and Dorothy and her brother, Jim, opened their doors and their hearts to Kappas.

Jim married a Nebraska Kappa, Stella Elliot, who was director of physical education for women at Ohio State University. In 1Γ898, Dorothy was Beta Nu’s delegate to the Kappa Convention, which was held at Lincoln. When Doctor Canfield resigned to become librarian at Columbia, Dorothy Canfield, B.Ph., entered Columbia and affiliated with our Barnard chapter. After studying at Columbia and in France, Italy, and Spain, she received the degree of Ph.D., in comparative philology at Columbia in 1904. She was secretary of Horace Mann school for several years.

Dorothy married John Redmond Fisher, essayist and journalist, in 1907. The old Canfield homestead in Arlington, Vermont, is the permanent home of the Fishers and little three-year-old Sally plays where her maternal great-grand-parents lived. Dorothy is a linguist of remarkable gift, speaking a number of languages as a cultured native speaks each one and reading fluently many more. She used to play a violin charmingly and oh, how her musical voice read Browning to me! The world knows her through her writing, for the magazines have been full of her unusual fiction for years. Some of her serious books are ‘Corneille and Racine in England’ (Macmillan), and ‘Rhetoric and Composition’ (Macmillan). Two novels have attracted much attention and favorable comment: ‘Gunhild’ (Holt), and ”The Squirrel Cage’ (Holt). The latter preaches one of the strongest sermons I know against the modern complex life, with its many artificial and false standards. Read it, all ye Kappas, and profit thereby.

Her last book, ‘The Montessori Mother,’ is fresh in our minds. Last winter, Dorothy Canfield Fisher (for so we must now call her), was in Rome and came in close contact with Doctor Montessori and the Casa dei Bambini and in this book the author brings to us the message of the Italian educator, whose philosophy is based on the democracy of the child. The book gives a clear statement of this new system and the apparatus used and helps all mothers in the education of their small children.

Dorothy Canfield Fisher

Dorothy Canfield Fisher

In the February 1917 Key, a letter from Fisher was published. It told of her efforts and how she ended up in Europe during the war:

You know I was partly brought up in France, and have lived here off and on a good deal, so that it’s a second home. The outbreak of the war seemed like the end of the world to me.had loved Germany too, and had lived there, and for that reason there was an added bitterness to the horror for me. I’ll never forget the day I stood on our front porch at Arlington (Vermont), on the slope of the big mountain, and read in the headlines that Belgium had been invaded. The very ground seemed to drop away from under my feet and when I looked up,  I remember how like a mirage our peaceful, green valley looked, so unchanged by what had changed all the world to me. But my little boy was only a few months old then, it was out of the question to leave him or to take him along. My husband (who felt quite as I did) and I worried along as best we could, through many painful months of “neutrality” until we couldn’t stand it any longer. Little Jimmy by that time had grown into a big, hearty, healthy child who didn’t look as though he could be hurt by traveling . . . and so we came. Mr. Fisher went into the American Ambulance Field Service, and went out to the front near Verdun. It was the very first separation since our marriage eight years ago, and I can tell you, it was a very dismal time for me; although I was ashamed to confess it because it was nothing compared to what my friends were suffering all round me here. It is true my husband was in danger, was replacing tires under shell-fire, and all the other trying circumstances possible, was spending whole days in the ‘abris’ with German shells falling all around it, and was driving night after night over shell-ruined roads, without any lights at all, to and from the front . . . but he wasn’t in the front-line trenches liable to be sent over the top at any moment; so I said nothing about my anxieties to any Frenchwoman.

She went on to add that after she arrived in Paris, she had a hand in the preparation of Braille reading materials for the men blinded during the war. When she wrote the letter she was serving as a head cook for the American Ambulance training camp. She then told about her friend, Madame Fischbacher:

Now please, will you do something for me? I appeal to you as members of my own family. This is the case. Mme. Fischbacher (the one who is taking my place at the Phare) lives in Bellevue-Meudon, a suburb of Paris. She has been terribly impressed by the sufferings of the children there, due to war-conditions. . .no, not war-orphans, everybody is helping them . . . nor yet refugees, who are getting help from many and many an organization; but just children, children who are always inexpressibly precious to every nation, but who to France are the only hope she has for the future. Their fathers are at the front and have been for three years. Just think of that. That means that a little baby of three, has now become a school-child of six without seeing his father more than three or four times, without ever having had any help from his father in the family life. Their mothers work them-selves into shadows trying to be father and mother both, and to be wage-earners into the bargain but they can’t do it. Nobody could! And they aren’t “helped” because their case is the normal, usual one in France. . .think of that! Now Mme. Fischbacher wants to start a little work for the children in her own town, and she is partly laying that aside because I have pounced on her for the work at the Phare Printing Department. Won’t you help me make it up to her and to the children of Bellevue. Why shouldn’t all Kappas, if they want to have a special war work of their own, just ‘adopt’ the little children among the poor of Bellevue.

She ended her plea with ” Think of yourselves as their far-away aunts, why don’t you . . . there, that’s just the thing. Let’s call ourselves the ‘Kappa Aunts of Bellevue’!” and signed of with “affectionate greetings to you all.”

In the 1919 Ohio State yearbook, her chapter gave this information about the work being done by one of their number: 

Behold the godmothers of the children of Bellevue. It happened through Dorothy Canfield Fisher so prominent in war work and in the literary world. Mrs Fisher was a member of Beta Nu Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma not so very many years ago. She is now in France while her husband is at the front. She takes care of great numbers of refugee children giving them clothing and food to keep them alive. She has granted our chapter the privilege of being headquarters for all the clothing that the people of this country send to her for the French who need it so badly.

The “Kappas aunts” took up the cause. A report of NPC war work which appeared in many NPC member publications noted that the Kappas:

Performed reconstruction work in Bellevue Meudon France under the direction of Dorothy Canfield Fisher. This work consisted in a free dispensary, doctor, visiting nurse and free meals for the sick and underfed children of this district. Many tons of clothing, shoes, toys, soap, and medicine were sent. Underclothes, dresses, suits, layettes, etc. were made by the chapters and alumnae associations for the children and women of Bellevue.  

Fisher received the Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae Achievement Award in 1948. She was the author of 22 novels and 18 books of non-fiction, including Understood Betsy. Published in 1916, it introduced a Montessori style of learning to an American audience. She died in 1958.

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(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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/

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Alpha Phi – A Society and Chapter House of Its Own

On September 18, 1872, Martha Foote (Crow) visited her friends Clara Sittser (Williams) and Kate Hogoboom (Gilbert), They were students at Syracuse University.  At that time, there was a men’s fraternity at Syracuse. The Delta Kappa Epsilon chapter was founded in 1871. The three friends were discussing the situation and  Martha asked, “Why can’t we have a society as well as the men?”

After pondering the question and seeing that the vision was indeed possible, they invited all the college women to discuss the possibility. Ten women – the original three plus Jane Higham, Clara Bradley (Burdette), Louise Shepherd (Hancock), Florence Chidester (Lukens), Ida Gilbert (Houghton), Elizabeth Grace (Hubbell), and Rena  Michaels (Atchinson) met and pledged allegiance to the sisterhood. Minutes from the first meeting noted that Michaels was chosen president, plans were made for weekly meetings at which literary exercises would be part of the  program, and a 25¢ tax was levied for the purchase of a secretary’s book.  The first debate was “Resolved – that women have their rights.”

Kate Hogoboom. She was the mother of the first Alpha Phi daughter, Ruth Gilbert (Becker(

Kate Hogoboom (Gilbert). She was the mother of the first Alpha Phi daughter, Ruth Gilbert (Becker), also a member of the Alpha Chapter.

At first, the chapter met in the homes of chapter members. Dr. Chidester, Florence’s father, allowed the use of his Irving Avenue home office on Monday evenings. The first chapter room was on Salina Street, over Sager and Grave’s carpet store. The chapter room remained there for six years until it was moved to a suite of rooms on the fourth floor of the Onondaga County Savings Bank Building.

In 1884, the Alpha Phi chapter gave up the meeting rooms it rented in the bank.  Plans were made to rent a house “where the out-of-town girls could live and where one room could be used for a chapter hall.  The experiment proved a success, and at the end of a year it was suggested that the girls build and own a chapter house.”

Jennie Thornburn (Sanford), an 1887 Alpha Phi initiate, recounted the story of Alpha Phi’s chapter house and she gave credit to Grace Latimer (Merrick), for “making practical by figures, by argument and by enthusiasm the possibility of building and owning a house.  At first we thought it a crazy idea; it was certainly novel – no girls had ever owned a chapter house.”

In May of 1886, a 56’ x 178’ lot at 17 University Place was purchased by the members of Alpha Phi for $1,400, or $25 a front foot. A few Alpha Phi fathers acted as a Board of Trustees. A $2,500 bank mortgage was arranged and another Alpha Phi dad loaned the chapter $2,700.  The father of a chapter member was  a building contractor.  He contributed his services and asked the firms with which he dealt to contribute some materials.

An eyewitness described the start of the building process: 

At 2 P.M. June 22, 1886, on the lot opposite the campus of Syracuse University, which had already been purchased by the Alpha Chapter of Alpha Phi, were held the exercises attending the laying of the corner stone of the first chapter house owned by the society.  Ida Gilbert DeLamater Houghton, ‘76, one of the founders of the organization, struck the gavel upon the unfinished foundation wall.  Carrie Shevelson Benjamin, ‘81, read a paper, at the conclusion of which a song composed by Lydia Thompson ‘83 was sung.  After a short address by Chancellor Sims (an Alpha Phi father), Dr. W. P. Coddington laid the corner stone in the name of the Alpha Chapter of Alpha Phi.  In closing all joined in a familiar college song and the interesting ceremonies were completed.  This was the first chapter house built by women and the day was the fourteenth anniversary of the founding of the Alpha Phi society.

The Alpha Phi chapter house on University Avenue in Syracuse. It was the first house built and owned by a women's fraternity. The house was sold in 1902 and the chapter moved to its current home on Walnut Place.

The Alpha Phi chapter house on University Avenue in Syracuse. It was the first house built and owned by a women’s fraternity. The house was sold in 1902 and the chapter moved to its current home on Walnut Place.

The chapter moved into its new home in November, 1186.  The chapter hall was dedicated in January, 1887, and on Washington’s birthday, the chapter opened the house to 300 invited guests.  In order to pay the mortgages, “it was decided to have the members make an annual subscription to a house fund, each girl giving what she thought she could afford.  This was done, the largest amount given being fifty dollars.” In 1896, the chapter house was redecorated at a cost of $600.  By 1902, the debts had been paid.  It was time to move again.”

As the house became too small, the Bacon residence on Walnut Park, the home of an Alpha Phi family, became available and it was purchased.  The old chapter house was sold to the university for dormitory use. Thirty women could live in the new house.” That home on Walnut Place is the home in which Alpha Phi still resides.

The home of Alpha Phi's Alpha Chapter at 308 Walnut Place in Syracuse.

The home of Alpha Phi’s Alpha Chapter at 308 Walnut Place in Syracuse.

 

(c) Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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/

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Ask an Archivist, a Special Cake Basket, and Presidential GLO Connections

Yesterday was Ask an Archivist Day. Some of my GLO archivist friends and I used social media to answer questions. I also learned some fun facts yesterday by eavesdropping on their social media conversations.

Towner Blackstock, Curator of the Phi Gamma Delta Archives, had the best graphic for the day.

GLOs would sometimes publish "secret: editions of their magazines. They usually contained facts and figures about each chapter and sometimes even frank assessments of chapter strengths and weaknesses.

GLOs would sometimes publish “secret numbers” of their magazines. They usually contained facts and figures about each chapter and sometimes even frank assessments of chapter strengths and weaknesses.

 

Speaking of Phi Gamma Delta, I missed telling you about the new acquisition in the Kappa Alpha Theta archives. Bettie Locke was the first female to enroll at Indiana Asbury University in Greencastle, Indiana. Today it is known as DePauw University. The Phi Gamma Delta chapter offered her a badge, but it did not come with full membership rights and responsibilities, so she declined the offer. Instead, the chapter gave her a silver cake basket. She and three of the other women from that first class of women founded Kappa Alpha Theta in 1870. The cake basket has remained in Bettie Locke Hamilton’s family for nearly 150 years; due to their generosity it now has a home in the Theta headquarters.

The family of Carole Cones-Bradfield, great granddaughter of Bettie Locke Hamilton, stopped by for a tour. Carole recently passed away, and she generously donated many items to the Theta archive that belonged to her great-grandmother. CEO Betsy Corridan is pictured holding Bettie's famous Theta cake basket. On the left is Dane Hartley, great-grandson of Bettie Locke, a DePauw alumnus, and a Phi Gamma Delta. He was Carole Cones-Bradfield's cousin. On the right is Landis Bradfield, Carole's husband.

“The family of Carole Cones-Bradfield, great granddaughter of Bettie Locke Hamilton, stopped by for a tour. Carole recently passed away, and she generously donated many items to the Theta archive that belonged to her great-grandmother. CEO Betsy Corridan is pictured holding Bettie’s famous Theta cake basket. On the left is Dane Hartley, great-grandson of Bettie Locke, a DePauw alumnus, and a Phi Gamma Delta. He was Carole Cones-Bradfield’s cousin. On the right is Landis Bradfield, Carole’s husband.” (From the KAT facebook page)

 

In my last post about the debate of the Vice-Presidential candidates, I failed to mention that Mike Pence is a Phi Gamma Delta member. He was initiated into the Hanover College chapter and served as his chapter’s president. Pence’s daughter, Charlotte, is a Chi Omega.

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Tiffany Trump, the daughter of Marla Maples and Donald Trump is a Kappa Alpha Theta from the University of Pennsylvania. Her half-brother Donald, Jr., is also a Penn alumnus. He is a Phi Gamma Delta.

Former President Bill Clinton is an honorary member of Phi Beta Sigma. He was initiated into the service fraternity Alpha Phi Omega while he was a college student.

Gary Johnson is a Sigma Alpha Epsilon from the University of New Mexico. His son Erik was initiated into the Sigma Chi chapter at the University of Denver.

Please let me know if I am missing any other GLO connections with the presidential candidates and their families.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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/

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Longwood University, Home of the Farmville Four, to Host Veep Debate

Tonight’s Vice-Presidential debate will take place at Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia. Longwood has a prominent place in the history of sororities. Ever heard the phrase “Farmville Four”? It refers to the four NPC groups founded at the Virginia’s State Female Normal School, the former name of Longwood University.

The Farmville Four and their founding dates are: Kappa Delta (October 23, 1897); Sigma Sigma Sigma (April 20, 1898); Zeta Tau Alpha (October 15, 1898);  and Alpha Sigma Alpha (November 15, 1901).

The Association of Education Sororities (AES) was founded in 1915 as the Association of Pedagogical Sororities, those organizations at teacher training institutions. It was founded by members of Alpha Sigma Alpha and Sigma Sigma Sigma with the assistance of Ida Shaw Martin. Martin, when she was Sarah Ida Shaw, founded Delta Delta Delta. 

 Alpha Sigma Alpha and Sigma Sigma Sigma as AES members chartered chapters at teacher’s colleges and normal schools. Kappa Delta and Zeta Tau Alpha chose to join the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) and in doing so, closed their Alpha chapters to comply with the gentleman’s agreement between AES and NPC.  

At the NPC meeting in November 1947, the six AES sororities were unanimously accepted as associate members of NPC. In 1949, Kappa Delta and Zeta Tau Alpha reestablished their Alpha chapters. 

Gift of the Farmville Four to Longwood University. Each side of the clock has the letters of one of the four NPC groups founded there.

Gift of the Farmville Four to Longwood University. Each side of the clock has the letters of one of the four NPC groups founded there.

 

***

OTD in 1905, Grace Goodhue and Calvin Coolidge were married at her family’s home in Burlington, Vermont. The native Vermonters were Massachusetts residents for most of their lives except for a stint in Washington, DC.

The Coolidge family - Calvin, Jr., Calvin, Grace, and John shortly before Calvin, Jr.'s death. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

The Coolidge family – Calvin, Jr., Calvin, Grace, and John shortly before Calvin, Jr.’s death. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Grace was a charter member of the Pi Beta Phi chapter at the University of Vermont. Calvin was a member of the Phi Gamma Delta chapter at Amherst College.

The Goodhue home in which Grace and Calvin Coolidge were married. It is now a part of Champlain College.

The Goodhue home in which Grace and Calvin Coolidge were married. It is now a part of Champlain College.

Posted in Alpha Sigma Alpha, Amherst College, Association of Education Sororities, Calvin Coolidge, Fran Favorite, Kappa Delta, Longwood University, National Panhellenic Conference, Phi Gamma Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Sigma Sigma, University of Vermont, Zeta Tau Alpha | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Longwood University, Home of the Farmville Four, to Host Veep Debate

BOTD – Thomas Wolfe, Pi Kappa Phi

Thomas Clayton Wolfe’s first novel Look Homeward Angel was based on his childhood in Asheville, North Carolina. Wolfe was born on this date in 1900. He spent some of his childhood in St. Louis while his mother ran a boardinghouse during the 1904 World’s Fair.

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill wasn’t Thomas Wolfe’s first college choice. He had hoped to go to Princeton. His father had a different idea, so in the fall of  1916, Wolfe entered UNC at the age of 15. In addition to writing, and later editing, the student newspaper, he was a member of the Dialectic Society, wrote for and acted in the Carolina Playmakers productions, and was elected to the Golden Fleece honor society. He also became a member of the Kappa Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi, which was chartered in 1914.

Thomas Wolfe at UNC.

Thomas Wolfe at UNC.

The March 1919 Star and Shield of Pi Kappa Phi contained this report from chapter historian Thomas Wolfe.

With the demobilization of the S.A.T.C. and the reestablishment of college activity on a pre-war basis, Kappa returned seven members at the opening of the new quarter after the holidays.

These men were: Bros. Charles Hazlehurst, a senior this year and an instructor in freshman mathematics; Jeff Bynum, Plattsburgh lieutenant, retired, geology instructor and active in college affairs; Gilliam Wilson, an M.D. aspirant, now in his senior year at the medical school; “Shorty” Spruill, a rising young aviator at a Texas field, now engaged in the mad pursuit of the elusive Phi Beta Kappa key; Nat Mobley, another aspirant of the key, assistant in the Physics Department and active in a great many things around the campus; Tom Wolfe, active in literary work, and Fred Moore, who assists in the management of the college paper.

Kappa started active operation immediately, and moved into its new location, a house conveniently situated on the campus in the fraternity row, between the Sigma Alpha Epsilon and the Sigma Nu houses. The house as occupied Wednesday, January 8. That night three new men were initiated, Bros W.P. Andrews of Charlotte, N.C., a senior; Ralph H. Wilson of Wilsons Mills, N.C., a junior; and Howard E. Fulton of Winston-Salem, N.C., a sophomore. After the initiations and ‘feed’ the members retired to their respective quarters. At two o’clock in the morning a fire broke out in the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house next door and before it could be checked had destroyed the large Sigma Alpha Epsilon house, our house, and the Sigma Nu house. The quick action of the student body saved practically all our furnishings as well as those of the other houses, a prevented a wider spread of the flames.

Kappa was not daunted by this. The next day we moved back into the house we occupied last year, where we have been comfortably located since.

Since moving back we have initiated Bro. Donnell Van Noppen of Greensboro, North Carolina, a sophomore, making a total of four men initiated since the opening. All these me are leaders in campus life and student organizations.

Most important work has been done this quarter. Feeling keenly our increased prestige on the Hill and need of better accommodations here, we have pledged $1,100 in the active chapter, an average of $100 a man, which will form the nucleus of a building fund.

On Saturday night, April 5, Kappa is going to be the host to all Kappa alumni at a banquet and get-together meeting to be held in the Yarborough Hotel, Raleigh, North Carolina. At this banquet definite plans will be formed for the building of a new chapter-house which e hope to begin next fall.  In our next letter we will inform you more definitely of our campaign’s progress.

We are awaiting with almost breathless expectation the arrival of THE STAR AND LAMP, and consequent news of the fraternity’s progress. We extend to all of the chapters and alumni fraternal greetings. 

The chapter letter was dated April 3, 1919 and  signed, “Fraternally, Kappa Brothers, Thomas Wolfe, Grapter.”

Wolfe died in 1938 at the age of 37. In 1979, on the 75th anniversary of the fraternity’s founding, the Pi Kappa Phi Hall of Fame was created. Wolfe was one of the three Pi Kappa Phi members in the inaugural class.

© Fran Becque, www.fraternityhistory.com, 2016. 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/

 

 

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