There are many
collegiate secret societies in North
America. They vary greatly in their levels of secrecy and
independence from their universities. As the term is used in this
article, a
secret society is a collegiate society where
significant effort is made to keep affairs, membership rolls, signs
of recognition, initiation, or other aspects secret from the
public.
Some collegiate secret societies are referred to as 'class
societies', which restrict membership to one class year. Most class
societies are restricted to the senior class, and are therefore
also called
senior societies on many campuses.
Categorization
There is no strict rule on the categorization of secret societies.
Secret societies can have ceremonial initiations, secret signs of
recognition (gestures, handshakes, passwords), formal secrets, (the
'true' name of the society, a motto, or a society history); but,
college
fraternities or "social fraternities" have the same, and some
of these elements can also be a part of literary societies, singing
groups, editorial boards, and honorary and pre-professional groups.
Some
secret societies have kept their membership secret, for example,
Seven Society, and some have not, like
Skull and
Bones
(the Yale societies had published their membership
lists in the yearbooks and the Yale
Daily News).
One key concept in distinguishing secret societies from
fraternities is that, on campuses that have both kind of
organizations, one can be a member of both, (that is, membership is
not mutually exclusive). Usually, being a member of more than one
fraternity is not considered appropriate, because that member would
have divided loyalties; however, typically, there is not an issue
being a member of a secret society and a fraternity, because they
are not considered similar organizations or competing
organizations.
An especially difficult problem is the degree to which any one
society is an actual society or is simply an honorary designation.
Phi Beta Kappa, for example, was a
true secret society, until after its secrets were divulged, the
society continued on. It claims today to still be an actual society
that has meetings, conducts its affairs, and is a living social
entity, however membership for most members consists of one
evening's initiation, and no more, which would make the society
completely an honorary in most people's eyes.
Many such societies exist which operate as honoraries on one
campus, and which may have been at one time actual meeting
societies, and which are kept alive by one or two dedicated local
alumni or an alumni affairs or Dean's office person, who see to it
that an annual initiation are held every year. Some of these
frankly state that they are honoraries, other seek to perpetuate
the image of a continuing active society where there is none.
While there are some guideline criteria for the neutral observer to
understand what sort of society any given organization is, much of
the analysis reverts to what any one society has been traditionally
understood to be. There are additional means, such as societies
that were more or less explicitly established in emulation of some
previous secret society, or using historical records to show that
society X was created out of society Y.
Common traits
There are several common traits among these societies.
The pattern for many
of these societies has been set by practices at Yale
. For example, many societies have two part
names which follow the pattern set by Yale's Skull and Bones
or Scroll and
Key. The Yale societies also limited their membership to
15, sometimes 16, in a class year, and it is common to find similar
numerical limits in many of these societies. Extensive mortuary
imagery is associated with many secret societies, maintaining a
pretense of great seriousness, and, again following Yale,
clubhouses are often called "tombs."
Tapping
The
archetypical selection process for entry into a collegiate secret
society began at Yale
University
by a process
called tapping. On a publicly announced evening,
Yale undergraduates would assemble informally in the College Yard.
Current members of Yale's secret societies would walk through the
crowd and literally tap a prospective member on the shoulder and
then walk with him up to the tapped man's
dorm
room. There, in private, they would ask him to become a member
of their secret society, of which the inductee had the choice of
accepting or rejecting the offer of membership. During this
process, it was publicly known who was being tapped for the coming
year. Today, the selection process is not quite as formal, but is
still public. Formal tapping days used to exist at Berkeley, and
still exist in a much more formal setting at Missouri.
History
The F.H.C.
Society, founded at the College of
William & Mary
on November 11, 1750, is considered the first of
the college secret societies. Included among its earliest
members was U.S. President Thomas Jefferson. In 1776,
Phi Beta Kappa was also founded as a secret
society at the College of William & Mary. The society did have
a rudimentary initiation, and there was some expectation of secrecy
about its transactions. That society had its secrets exposed in the
mid 1830's by students at Harvard University acting under the
patronage of John Quincy Adams. It has operated since the 1840s as
a non-secret society. It is true that the spread of Phi Beta Kappa
to different institutions did cause competitors to be established.
Some of these competitors, like
Kappa Alpha (1825) developed into what
are known today as college fraternities. There was a second strain
of development.
At Yale University, Chi Delta Theta (1821), and Skull &
Bones
(1832), were founded and they became the
antecedants of a different 'family tree' of societies properly
known as class societies.
Skull & Bones aroused competition on campus, bringing forth
Scroll & Key (1841), and later
Wolf's Head (1883), among students in
the senior class. But the prestige of the senior societies was able
to keep the very influential fraternities
Alpha Delta Phi and
Psi Upsilon from ever becoming full four year
institutions at Yale. They remained junior class societies there.
There were also sophomore and freshman societies at Yale as well. A
stable system of eventually eight class societies (two competing
chains of four class societies each) was in place by the late
1840s.
Delta Kappa Epsilon is actually
a highly successful junior class society, founded at Yale in 1844.
None of the 51 chapters the parent chapter spawned operates as a
junior society, but DKE did come from the class society system.
Likewise,
Alpha Sigma Phi started
out as a Yale sophomore society and now has 68 chapters, (although,
again, none of Alpha Sigma Phi's chapters have remained sophomore
societies).
The development of class societies spread from Yale to northeastern
campuses.
Seniors at neighboring Wesleyan
established a senior society, Skull & Serpent
(1865), and second society, originally a chapter of Skull and
Bones, but then independent as a sophomore society, Theta Nu Epsilon (1870), which began to
drastically increase the number of campuses with class
societies. William Raimond Baird noted in the 1905 edition
of his
Manual that "In addition to the regular
fraternities, there are in the Eastern colleges many societies
which draw members from only one of the undergraduate classes, and
which have only a few features of the general fraternity
system."
Kappa Sigma Theta, Phi Theta Psi, Delta Beta Xi, Delta Sigma Phi,
were all sophomore societies at Yale, and the two large freshman
societies of Delta Kappa and Kappa Sigma Epsilon lived until 1880.
Delta Kappa established chapters at Amherst, the University of
North Carolina, Virginia, Mississippi, Dartmouth College, and
Centre College. Kappa Sigma Epsilon had chapters at Amherst,
Rensselaer Polytechnic and Dartmouth. Other class societies existed
at Brown, Harvard, Syracuse, Colgate, Cornell, and other
Northeastern institutions.
Theta Nu Epsilon spread to about 120 colleges and universities, but
many of its chapters operated as three year societies where
operating as a class year society was inappropriate.
It is from this class society historical base, and the desire to
emulate the most well-known of all the class societies, Skull &
Bones, that senior societies in particular began to spread
nationally between 1900 and 1930. There are also junior class,
sophomore, and freshman class societies to be found at campuses
across the country today.
Significant individual institutions
Auburn University
Auburn
University
is home to
the secret society known to few as the Spade Society.
Founded in 1915, the Spade society is mostly composed of high
ranking individuals in the Student Government Association and the
Inter-Fraternity Council, as well as other student organizations.
According to its 1915 charter, the purpose of Spade is to work for
the betterment of the university. The organization "taps" ten new
members each year. These ten members are all seniors that are being
recognized for their popularity and involvement on campus.
Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green State
University plays host to the secret society known as
Sic Sic. SICSIC was founded in 1946 and is the
oldest continuous organization at the university. The society was
founded on Saturday, October 5 at 12:45am by the third President of
the University (Dr. Frank Prout) and six prominent students on
campus and then subsequently announced to the public from the roof
of Hayes Hall at 3:00am. The group aims to uphold the history and
traditions of the university and promote campus spirit. They are
most known for the posting of cryptic signs throughout the campus
as well as appearing masked at important campus events. The society
is composed of six members; two sophomores, two juniors, and two
seniors. Each spring the identities of two senior members are
revealed and two freshmen members are selected for
membership.
University of Central Florida
The
University of
Central Florida
is the home to the secret society known as The Roundtable. The Roundtable was
founded in 2006, and has members involved in all aspects of UCF
life, including Student Government, the Office of Student
Involvement, Housing and Residence Life, Orientation and Greek
Life. When members are accepted is still unknown.
Columbia University
Columbia University has three
secret societies. One, St. A's (short for
St. Anthony Hall), is not as secret, as
they host public parties and are known for their members'
extraordinary wealth. The St. A's are, in fact, the first (alpha)
chapter of the nationwide organization. The other two secret
societies, the Sachems and the Nacoms, consist of 15 members each
and do not publicly release their names; however, some former
members openly declare their former association with the groups.
Both the Sachem and Nacom societies are primarily
philanthropic organizations that seek to
include members who have shown considerable commitment to the
university. Members are often student leaders on campus.
In addition to the three existing organizations, Columbia
University was home to the Ax and Coffin society, the oldest Secret
Society in the Ivy league. Members wore a pin that consisted of a
coffin, opened to reveal a skull, with an ax lying across the top
diagonally. The group is now widely believed to be defunct, and few
records exist of their club activities, although the Columbia
University library maintains a membership roster and a copy of the
society's rituals. In recent times, however, some have begun to
suspect that The Order of the Ax and Coffin has not been defunct,
but severely reduced in order to seem inactive. If true, the Ax
andCoffin would be the oldest running secret society.
Cornell University
Cornell
University
has a rich history of secret societies on
campus. Andrew Dickson White
, the first President of Cornell
University
and himself a Bonesman
, is said to have encouraged the formation of the
Kappa Alpha Society - a "secret
society" on campus. "The founding of
Kappa Alpha Society at Cornell was
arranged with White prior to the opening of the university." In the
early years, the fraternities were called the "secret societies,"
but as the Greek system developed into a larger, more public
entity, "secret society" began to refer only to the class
societies. In the early twentieth century, Cornell students
belonged to sophomore, junior, and senior societies, as well as
honorary societies for particular fields of study. Liberalization
of the 1960s spelled the end of these organizations as students
rebelled against the establishment. The majority of the societies
disappeared or became inactive in a very short time period, and
today, only three organizations operate on campus:
Kappa Alpha Society (founded in 1825 -
the oldest Greek-letter social fraternity in the United States),
Sphinx Head (founded in 1890) and
Quill and Dagger (founded in 1893).
Each society seeks to honor the top 1% of the rising senior class
for significant leadership, service to Cornell University and the
community, and good character. Membership is mutually
exclusive.
Dartmouth College
Dartmouth
College
's Office of Residential Life states that the
earliest senior societies on campus date to 1783 and "continue to
be a vibrant tradition within the campus community."
Abaris Society and
Cobra Society are two such
examples. Six of the eight senior societies keep their membership
secret, while the other societies maintain secretive elements.
According to the college, "approximately 25% of the senior class
members are affiliated with a senior society." The college's
administration of the society system at Dartmouth focuses on
managing membership and tapping lists, and differs from that of
Yale's, though there are historical parallels between the two
colleges' societies.
Dickinson College
The
Raven's Claw is an all male senior
honorary society at Dickinson College.
It was founded in
1896, making it the first society unique to Dickinson
College
and one of the oldest in the country.
Membership is limited to seven senior men who are selected by the
seven previous members. The new members are chosen based on a
variety of factors, these include: campus leadership, a solid
academic record, and athletic participation. New members are
inducted in a "Tapping Ceremony" which is held on the "Old Stone
Steps of Old West." The ceremony is traditionally conducted during
commencement weekend. They are called "claws" or "white hats",
denoting the white caps they wear around campus to signify unity
and loyalty. The Raven's Claw Society is very loyal and has been a
part of Dickinson's history for over 100 years. While the members
of the group are known, the majority of their actions and
traditions are concealed. The group prides itself in serving the
Dickinson College and Carlisle, Pennsylvania communities through
discrete service activities. The group's alumni organization is
also responsible for founding one of the college's largest
scholarship funds and the McAndrews Fund for athletics.
Additionally, Dickinson College has named several buildings on
campus after Raven's Claw members in recognition of their generous
service and/or financial contributions to the school.
Emory University
Emory
University
has four secret societies—the D.V.S. Senior Honor Society, the oldest
society, founded in 1902; Ducemus; the Order of Ammon; and the
Paladin Society. D.V.S. has provided the university mace that is
used each year at the Convocation and Commencement ceremonies. The
Paladin Society endeavors to make positive contributions to Emory's
"spirit" anonymously and confers the Knights of Emory Spirit Award
on two members of the Emory community each semester. The societies
have been populated by many of Emory's best, including university
and student group leaders, members of the Board of Trustees and
recipients of Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships.
Florida State University
Florida
State University
plays home to the secret society known as the
Burning Spear Society.
This organization was originally founded in 1993 and was first
called the
Charlie Ward for Heisman Coalition. Burning
Spear is fully integrated and has a strong history of inclusion of
persons of different gender and race.
University of Georgia

Greek Horsemen leaders, 1968
University
of Georgia
is home to at least five secret societies —
Gridiron Secret Society,
Order of the Greek
Horsemen, Order of the Acropolis, Palladia Secret
Society and Trust of the Pearl.
Gridiron Secret Society, founded in 1900, has been
described as a fraternal society connected to the University of
Georgia. Its membership is all male but not limited to the Greek
system. Its alumni include a number of prominent business and
political leaders in the state of Georgia such as the current U.S.
Senators from Georgia and the current Governor of Georgia. Gridiron
has extensive alumni participation, with well-attended banquets
held in Athens at least twice each year.
Order of the Greek Horsemen, founded in 1955, is composed
of fraternity men and annually inducts five new members from among
the male leaders of the
Greek system. It is
considered the highest honor a fraternity man at UGA may attain.
Order of the Acropolis is a secret society composed of
approximately 30 members from 12 fraternities and sometimes
confused with Order of the Greek Horsemen. Acropolis is rumored to
play a large role in the leaders of the IFC system.
Palladia Secret Society is the female equivalent of the
Gridiron Secret Society. Palladia was founded in the early 1960s
and is known as "the highest honor a woman may attain at the
University of Georgia." Palladia inducts approximately 12
outstanding women each year. Palladia has an extensive network of
alumni, including administrators of the University of Georgia and
prominent female leaders across the state.
Trust of the Pearl, founded when the first sororities were
chartered at UGA, is a secret society for sorority women and known
as the female equivalent of the Order of the Greek Horsemen. The
Trust of the Pearl is considered the highest honor a sorority woman
may attain at UGA and inducts five new members each spring. Pearls
are rumored to play a heavy role in selecting future leaders of the
Panhellenic System but the purpose of the society and requirements
for selection are unknown. Members often wear black and a strand of
pearls when gathering in public.
Georgia Institute of Technology

Crest of the ANAK Society, circa
1940
Crest of the ANAK Society, circa 2008
The
ANAK Society is the oldest known secret
society and honor society based at the Georgia
Institute of Technology
(Georgia Tech) in Atlanta, Georgia. Founded
in 1908, ANAK's purpose is "to honor outstanding juniors and
seniors who have shown both exemplary leadership and a true love
for Georgia Tech". The society's name refers to
Anak, a biblical figure said to be the forefather of a
race of giants.
Although not originally founded as a secret society, ANAK has kept
its activities and membership rosters confidential since 1961.
Membership is made public upon a student's graduation or a faculty
member's retirement. The ANAK Society's membership comprises at
least 1,100 Georgia Tech graduates, faculty members, and honorary
members. Notable members include Jimmy Carter (honorary), Bobby
Dodd (honorary), Ivan Allen Jr., and most of Georgia Tech's
presidents. Membership in the ANAK Society has long been considered
the highest honor a Georgia Tech student can receive.
The society has been influential in the history of Georgia Tech.
ANAK
played a major role in establishing several of Georgia Tech's most
active student organizations – including Georgia Tech's yearbook,
the Blueprint; Georgia
Tech's student newspaper, The Technique
; and Georgia Tech's Student Government
Association – as well as several lasting Georgia Tech traditions. The
society also claims involvement in a number of civil rights
projects, most notably in peacefully integrating Georgia Tech's
first African American students in 1961 and preventing the
Ku Klux Klan from setting up a student chapter
at Georgia Tech (The clan resorted to setting up a chapter at the
University of Georgia).
Harvard University

Clubhouse of the
Fly Club, a
final club at Harvard University
Harvard
does not have secret societies in the usual
sense. Some assert that 'Final Clubs' are analogous to
secret societies, some disagree.
The groups are secretive about their election procedures, and they
have secret initiations and meetings. However, there is little
secrecy about who is a member. They are larger than secret
societies generally are, (approximately sixty students per club).
Guests are admitted under restrictions. However the Owl Club, the
Porcellian and the Delphic are somewhat stricter than the others,
having rules against admitting non-members to most areas of their
buildings. "Punch Season" and the "Final Dinner" is analogous to
"Tap" at Yale.
Final Clubs at Harvard include the
Porcellian (1791, originally called The
Argonauts); The Delphic Club (1846);
Fly
Club, (1836), a successor of
Alpha
Delta Phi;
The Phoenix - S K
Club (1897);
Owl Club,
originally called Phi Delta Psi, (1896); The
Fox Club (1898); and the Spee Club.
The Signet Society, a Harvard literary club
rather than a Final Club, is also regarded on campus and by members
as a "semi-secret" society.
There are also six female clubs: The Pleiades Society, The Seneca,
La Vie, Sabliere, The Isis, and The Bee.
University of Illinois
The
University of Illinois
has the
Ma-Wan-Da Senior Society.
.JPG/200px-Dianthus_caryophyllus_L_(Clove_pink).JPG)
Dianthus caryophyllus, a symbol of
Ma-Wan-Da, represents "true endeavor" when in white
Ma-Wan-Da, now honorary, used Native American symbolism.
Emblems include the bronze
arrowhead and
the white carnation flower,
Dianthus caryophyllus. Each spring,
only 15 of the most prestigious campus leaders were invited to
join, after which, their names were inscribed onto an
arrowhead-shaped plaque and hung on the
Ma-Wan-Da Tree.
This tradition continued until 1959 before the tree was cut down to
make room for the
Illini Union.
University of Michigan
Michigan's society,
Michigamua, has been inspired by the
rituals and culture of the
Native Americans of the
United States. Since its founding, it has evolved into the
Order of Angell, which first used
the tower of their campus union as their "tomb". There is a secret
society just for engineering students, the
Vulcan Senior
Engineering Society. The
Phoenix Senior Honor
Society, comprised of undergraduate senior students, exists to
work to address issues that face students on campus and to elicit
positive change for all students by leading through example.
University of Missouri
Phi Kappa Psi established its Missouri
Alpha chapter in 1869, and it would spawn one of the largest Greek
life systems in North America as well as a large secret society
system. In 1870,
Zeta Phi was established
as the first independent secret society on the Missouri campus, but
the society soon affiliated with
Beta
Theta Pi Fraternity after its first few years. In 1895, the
Alpha Theta Chapter of the
Theta Nu
Epsilon sophomore society was founded under the guidance of
faculty member Luther DeFoe. DeFoe also served as a mentor to the
founding members of the
QEBH senior men's
society, which was revealed in 1898 and is the oldest secret
society that still remains active on campus.
Mystical Seven was revealed in
1907 and has become the second most well known society on campus.
Some have suggested that Missouri's Mystical Seven was modeled
after Virginia's
Seven Society, which
had been established just a couple years earlier. Other secret
societies soon sprang up, including Society of the Hidden Eye for
junior/senior men,
LSV for senior women,
Thadstek for freshman/sophomore men, Tomb and Key for
freshman/sophomore men, Steinmetz for senior engineers, and Kappa
Kappa whose membership composition was unknown. During this period
of rapid expansion of secret societies, a network of
sub-rosa inter-fraternity organizations also
established itself on campus with no purpose other than socializing
and mischief making. This network, known commonly as the "Greek
Underworld" included organizations such as Seven Equals, Kappa Beta
Phi, Sigma Phi Sigma, Kappa Nu Theta, and Sigma Alpha Beta.
Mizzou is currently home to at least six secret honor societies
that still participate in annual public Tap Day ceremonies at the
end of each spring semester. QEBH, Mystical Seven, LSV, Alpha Xi
Chapter of Omicron Delta Kappa, Friars Chapter of Mortar Board, and
Rollins Society each use the Tap Day ceremony at the conclusion of
the year to reveal the members who were initiated over the past
year. Missouri is one of few remaining institutions in which the
local Omicron Delta Kappa and Mortar Board chapters carry out much
of their work in secrecy. In addition to Tap Day activities,
several of the societies maintain a public presence during some
athletic events. QEBH is the caretaker of the Victory Bell, along
with Nebraska's
Society of
Innocents, awarded to the winner of the
Missouri–Nebraska Rivalry
football game each year. Mystical Seven and Oklahoma's Pe-et
Society were likewise entrusted with the Peace Pipe trophy that was
awarded to the winner of the biennial Missouri-Oklahoma football
match. Omicron Delta Kappa served as caretaker of the Indian War
Drum trophy awarded to the winner of the annual
Border War
football game between Missouri and Kansas.
Mount Olive College

Terpsichorean Society
Mount Olive College is home to a
number of upperclassmen
eating clubs.
Though these organizations are not
secret societies per se, they function
analogously to such organizations with secret rituals, a
confidential selection process, and emphasis upon elite involvment.
Seven
eating clubs exist at
Mount Olive College. Five of these clubs
are lottery clubs: Alcove Club, Carolinian Club, Hyperion Club,
MacIntosh Lodge, and Vernon House. These clubs select their
membership through a specialized lottery process. Two clubs, Serp
Club and Terpsichorean Society, are
bicker
clubs and select their members in secret.
Similar to the
eating clubs of Princeton
University
and final clubs of
Harvard
University
, the eating clubs of
Mount Olive College are designed
to provide meals and social functions to the wealthy and elite
students of the College.
New York University
New York
University
had two major societies. The
Eucleian Society which began in 1832 and
the
Red Dragon Society which
began in 1898. Both societies continue to flourish today.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The
library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
contains the archives of the Order of
Gimghoul
, a secret society headquartered at the Gimghoul
Castle. The order was founded in 1889 by Robert Worth
Bingham, Shepard Bryan, William W. Davies, Edward Wray Martin, and
Andrew Henry Patterson, who were students at the time.
The society is open to "notable" male students (rising juniors and
higher), and faculty members by invitation. The society centers
itself around the legend of Peter Dromgoole, a student who
mysteriously disappeared from the UNC campus in 1833. The founders
originally called themselves the Order of Dromgoole, but later
changed it to the Order of Gimghoul to be, "in accord with midnight
and graves and weirdness," according to the university's
archives.
Tradition has it that the order upheld the "Dromgoole legend and
the ideals of Arthurian knighthood and chivalry." From all
accounts, the order is social in nature, and has no clandestine
agenda. Membership is closed and information about the order is
strictly confidential, as is access to archives which are less than
50 years old.
The Order of the Gorgon's Head, another secret society at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, was founded in 1896 by
Darius Eatman, Edward Kidder Graham, Ralph Henry Graves, Samuel
Selden Lamb, Richard Henry Lewis, Jr., and Percy DePonceau
Whitaker. Membership has always been limited to male members of the
junior, senior, professional, and post-graduate classes along with
male faculty members. Inductees may not be members of other
societies. Officers include Princeps (chief officer), Quaestor, and
Scriptor. The purpose of the Order is to promote friendship, good
will, and social fellowship among its members. The Order of the
Gorgon's Head was one of two "junior orders" established at the
University in the 1890s. The two orders had written agreements that
they would not attempt to recruit freshmen or sophomores. Each
order had a lodge (the Gimghouls later built a castle), where
members gathered for meetings and events. Each had secret rituals
based on myths. Those of the Order of the Gorgon's Head centered on
the myth of the Gorgons, three monstrous sisters prominent in
ancient Greek and Roman lore.
The University's library also contains the archives of the
Dialectic and
Philanthropic Societies. The Societies were founded in 1795 by
some of the first students to attend the University, and are the
oldest public school societies in the nation. While at first
maintaining strict secrecy in their proceedings, the Societies'
meetings are now generally open to the public; however, the
Societies reserve the right at all times to call an "Executive
Session", at which point all non-members are escorted from the
chambers. All undergraduates may attempt to join one of the two
societies by petitioning, but only a select few are admitted, upon
mutual agreement between current Society members.
Norwich University
Norwich University banned all
secret societies in the late 1990s, citing controversy regarding
hazing and abuse of students. Prior to the ban Norwich was home to
a handful of long standing secret societies such as the Night
Riders and Skull and Swords.
University of Oklahoma
The
University
of Oklahoma
's most well known secret societ is PE-ET.
PE-ET (“pay-et”) is the secret honor society for the outstanding
seniors at the University of Oklahoma. The prestigious honor of
membership in PE-ET, bestowed upon only the university’s finest
students, is a time-honored tradition since 1910. Students selected
to PE-ET exhibit the highest ability in scholarship, leadership,
and original work among the men and women of the University of
Oklahoma. Ten student are asked to join after an application and
interview process during the end of their junior year. The group is
most known for the lavish pranks they play on the university.
University of Pennsylvania
The
Philomathean Society is the
oldest of the secret societies at Penn and was founded in 1813.
Though it does not claim to be secret, little is known about their
rituals or alumni network. The Philos occupy the entire top floor
of College Hall. The Sphinx Senior Society and the
Friars Senior Society were both
founded at the turn of the 20th century, while The
Mortar Board Senior Society was founded in
1922.
None of these societies were intended to be
secret, in that their undergraduate and alumni membership were and
continue to be publicly known, they share many of the
characteristics of undergraduate secret societies of the time
(e.g., Skull and
Bones
); they tap a diverse group of campus leaders to
become members during their senior year, organize social and
service activities throughout the year, and maintain an extensive
network of successful and notable alumni. Alumni of Friars,
for example, include
Harold Ford Jr.
and
Ed Rendell; the Sphinx alumni roster
boasts
Richard A. Clarke and
John
Legend.
There are several other groups called
"secret societies" at the University of Pennsylvania
. These groups that use the term "secret
society" to generally denote a social club that is independent of
any official organization. For this reason, the society cannot be
regulated by the university, and is not accountable to a national
fraternal or sororal organization. Most of the all-male secret
societies, such as "Owl Society," (founded 1992), "THEOS," (founded
1998) and "OZ," (founded 2004) were founded by former members of
fraternities after the fraternity to which they belonged had been
suspended by the university for disciplinary reasons. These groups
tend to not follow the senior society model (i.e. tapping leaders
going into their senior year). Most of these groups have members
from a variety of class years and are more similar to single
chapter fraternities than true senior / secret societies.Other
societies, such as the all-female "Tabard Society" (founded 1987),
were founded by students who were not affiliated with any
particular Greek organization.At UPenn, secret societies are
smaller than their Greek counterparts, and tend to vary in degree
of secrecy.
Penn State University
Penn State
University
is known for the Skull and Bones Senior
Society, Parmi Nous Senior Society and the Lion's
Paw Senior Society. Lion's Paw has extensive alumni
participation, and strong links to the alumni affairs office of the
university, thus making it somewhat different than other societies
included here.
Princeton University
Princeton's
eating clubs are not
fraternities, nor are they secret societies by any standard
measure, but they are often seen as being tenuously
analogous.
Additionally, Princeton has secret societies; the most visible is a
chapter of
St. Anthony Hall, the
literary society. Princeton also has a long tradition of
underground societies. While secret society membership is
relatively public at some schools, Princeton's historical secret
society rolls are very secretive because of
Woodrow Wilson's ban on clandestine
organizations and his threat to expel secret fraternity members
from Princeton. One such society is Phi (pronounced
fē), a
society dating to 1929 when members of the Whig society splintered
off after the merger of the
Whig and
Cliosophic debating societies. Phi's membership
is secretive and difficult to discern, because no more than 10
active "Phis" exist at one time: Phis usually receive offers at the
end of their 3rd year. As an adaptation to Princeton's stringent
anti-society rules, each active class does not meet the preceding
class that selected it until the 1st of June (after their first
Reunions and before graduation). 1.6... is the
Golden Ratio, hence the name
Phi.
Rutgers University
As one of the oldest colleges in the United States, Rutgers has had
several secret societies on campus as far back as 1872 with the
establishment of the Sword and Serpent. Others secretive societies
at Rutgers included the Brotherhood of the Golden Dagger
(1898-1940), Casque and Dagger (1901) and Cap and Skull (1900-1969,
1982-present). Only
Cap and Skull is
still in operation. However, it is now university-sanctioned, has
shed much of its secrecy, and is more generally an honor society.
Today, less than one-half percent of Rutgers students are tapped
for Cap and Skull membership.
University of Virginia

North Steps of the Rotunda, with
Z
Society logo
Secret
societies have been a part of University of Virginia
student life since the founding of the Eli Banana society in 1878. Early secret
societies, such as Eli Banana and
T.I.L.K.A.,
had secret initiations but public membership; some, such as the
Hot Feet, now the
IMP Society, were very public, incurring the
wrath of the administration for public revels.
The first truly "secret society" was the
Seven Society, founded circa 1905. Nothing is
known about the Seven Society except for their philanthropy to the
University; members are revealed at their death. A few other
societies that flourished around the turn of the century, such as
the
Z Society (formerly Zeta), who were
founded in 1892, the IMP Society, reformulated in 1913 after the
Hot Feet were banned in 1908, and Eli Banana, are still active at
the University today.
New societies have periodically appeared at the University during
the 20th century. The most notable are the
P.U.M.P.K.I.N.
Society, a secret group that rewards contributions to the
University and which was founded prior to 1970; and the
Society
of the Purple Shadows, founded 1963, who are only seen in
public in purple robes and hoods and who seek to "safeguard
vigilantly the University traditions". Many of the secret societies
listed contribute to the University either financially or through
awards or some other form of recognition of excellence at the
University.
Washington and Lee University

Cadaver Logo Spray Painted on Wilson
Field
The
Cadaver Society is a secret society of students at Washington
and Lee University
in Lexington, Virginia, United States. The
group's membership and organizational structure are unknown.
Cadaver has been in continuous operation since its founding in
1957. The Cadaver's have a bridge that bears their name, connecting
the main campus to Wilson Field, as well as their symbol in many
prominent places throughout the campus. The society has been
criticized for their secrecy and many of their activities which
include running around dressed in all black and masks late at night
as well as drawing their symbol all over campus. They have been
known to run through the Sorority houses, talking in high voices
and attempting to wake everyone in the houses up.
The College of William and Mary

7 Society plaque located inside the
university's Sadler Center
The
College of
William and Mary
in Williamsburg, Virginia
was the home of one of the nation's first known
college secret societies, the F.H.C. Society, founded in 1750. The initials of the
society stand for a Latin phrase, likely "Fraternitas, Humanitas,
et Cognitio" or "Fraternitas Humanitas Cognitioque" (two renderings
of "brotherhood, humaneness, and knowledge"), but it has always
been jokingly known as the 'Flat Hat Club'. William & Mary
alumnus and third U.S. President,
Thomas Jefferson, is perhaps the most
famous member of the F.H.C. Society. Other notable members of the
original society include Col. James Innes,
St. George Tucker, and
George Wythe. Jefferson noted that "When I was
a student of Wm. & Mary college of this state, there existed a
society called the F.H.C. society, confined to the number of six
students only, of which I was a member, but it had no useful
object, nor do I know whether it now exists." The best opinion is
that the society did not survive the invasion by British forces
during the Revolution. The society was revived as the
Flat Hat Club from 1916 to 1943 and again in
1972.
John Heath and
William Short (Class of
1779) founded the nation's first collegiate greek-letter
organization, the
Phi Beta Kappa
Society, at William & Mary on December 5, 1776 as a secret
literary and philosophical society.
Additional chapters were established in
1780 and 1781 at Yale
and Harvard
.. With nearly 300 chapters across the
country, Phi Beta Kappa has grown to become the nation's premier
academic honor society. Alumni
John
Marshall and
Bushrod
Washington were two of the earliest members of the society,
elected in 1778 and 1780, respectively.
Although the pressures of the American Civil War forced several
societies to disappear, many were revived during the 20th century.
Some of the secret societies known to currently exist at the
College are the
7 Society, 13
Club, Alpha Club,
Bishop
James Madison Society,
Flat Hat
Club, The Society, The Spades, W Society, and
Wren Society.
Westminster College of Salt Lake City
Westminster College has one
known secret society, called "Prima Netagum." "Netagum" is the
biological term "
Mutagen" spelled backwards,
the name of the society being stylized in Latin. Although its
origins are unclear, it is known that the society chooses
approximately 15 members per year, usually during Fall semester.
The society makes various physical, biological, and mathematical
references, especially to Chaos Theory; the idea perhaps being that
members of the society focus on making a small change (a "
mutation"), to affect a large system. Membership is
mostly comprised of high-profile science students and student
government members. The selection process for "Alphas," or new
members, is unknown. Unlike the sometimes arcane rituals of similar
collegiate societies, alumni of Prima Netagum- or "Omegas"- have
reported that the focus is more on personal revelation &
affecting positive change on campus and the greater community.
However, according to one Omega, Alphas must go through an
intellectually demanding initiation process in order to become
Omegas. The organization notably uses the
Lorenz attractor, the
butterfly, and mathematical constants in their
symbols.
Yale University
The term
"Secret society" at Yale University
encompasses organizations with many shared but not
identical characteristics. The oldest surviving
undergraduate secret societies at Yale derive from various 19th c.
fraternal organization traditions, rooted in the Enlightenment
society-founding boom, and therefore the term "secret society" at
Yale encompasses a variety of models: senior-only versus
three-year, with or without Greek letters, affiliated with other
campus chapters or stand-alone entities. From 1854-1956, "'Sheff',"
the
Sheffield Scientific
School was the sciences and engineering college of Yale
University, and it also had a fraternal culture that differed in
some respects from the humanities campus, further enriching (and
complicating) the picture. In the Yale traditional secret society,
meetings (typically held twice a week) focus on personal revelation
and can involve arcane rituals.

Skull and Bones "tomb" at Yale
University
Yale's history contains numerous fraternal organizations that have
become defunct, those remaining survived owing to confluences of
endowments, real estate, and the vigor of their respective alumni
organizations and their charitable Trusts. Across this spectrum,
common features of Yale secret societies are that they (usually)
have fifteen members per class, they own their "tomb" which is
wholly or partially closed to non-members (unlike a club
such as the
Elizabethan Club whose
members may bring their guests).
Secret societies at Yale "tap" their members, mostly on the same
"Tap Night," and a member is off-limits to recruitment by another
secret society, i.e. reciprocal exclusivity—in contrast to Yale's
singing groups which also "tap," but whose members may also join a
society. Typically, a group of secret societies places an
advertisement in the Yale Daily News in early spring that informs
students when Tap Night is taking place and when students should
expect to receive formal offers (usually 1 week before official Tap
Night). Tap Night is typically held on a Thursday in mid April; the
most recently held Tap Night was April 16, 2009.
As hybrids like Sage and Chalice and St. Anthony Hall demonstrate,
it is not possible to draw clear distinctions between these
secretive organizations. Yale's Buildings and Grounds Department
refers to some as "senior societies" in its online architectural
database.
The Yale Alumni Magazine contains historical references to
fraternities also possessing "tombs." A series of articles on
Dartmouth and Yale secret society architecture provides an overview
of the buildings as "a uniquely American representation of the
joining spirit, (that) are crucial to an understanding of the
organizations they represent."
Societies that own real property are sometimes known as 'landed'
societies.
The three oldest landed societies are
Skull and
Bones
(1832), Scroll and
Key, (1841) and Wolf's Head,
(1883). The surviving landed Sheffield societies are
Berzelius (1848) and
Book and Snake (1863), and
St. Elmo (1889), (senior
societies), and
St. Anthony Hall
(1867), which calls itself a "final society". Three newer societies
that own property include
Elihu (1903),
Manuscript Society (1952), and
Mace and Chain (1956).
The certain existence of societies without physical real property
(Sage and Chalice) suggests that there may be any number of unknown
secret societies at Yale. Certainly there have been many which did
not last long enough to leave any significant records. Indeed, the
Yale Rumpus has in recent years published names of
students it believes are in various secret societies. According to
the Rumpus, in addition to the secret societies listed in this
wikipedia page, numerous other societies (including "Spade and
Grave," "Ox," "Truth and Courage," "Ceres Athena," "Gryphon," "Fork
and Knife," "Ink and Needle," etc.) are either active or have been
active recently. Many of these societies are called "underground"
societies, given their lack of physical space. They typically meet
in off campus apartments, fraternity common rooms, classrooms, and
other available spaces. Some groups have enough resources to rent a
permanent meeting space. These societies vary in age; some were
founded in the 19th, 20th, or the 21st century. Given the
extracurricular zeal and competition for society spots evident in
the Yale student body culture, a definitive list of secret
societies that exist on the campus (or on any campus) can change
year by year. While newer societies may appear trivial to the
outside observer, it is important to note that yesterday's
"underground" society can become tomorrow's landed society (as the
example of Mace and Chain proves) and that even young societies can
draw in prominent members (see Sage and Chalice).
The secret society tendency for mortuary-themed concepts, and the
prevalence of Yale men in the creation of the U.S. intelligence
community is often suggested to be why the term "spook" (an
undergraduate society member) became a colloquialism for a spy.
For more
on Yale secret society members' influences on intelligence
agencies, see the discussion in the article on Skull &
Bones
.
List of notable North American collegiate secret societies
This list is limited to societies with a) their own
wikipedia articles, or b) with independent third-party citation
links. Editors are invited to add to this list as long as they can
provide adequate verifiable citations. The list is not exhaustive;
many known societies are not included because they currently lack
verifiable citations.
| Name |
Year Established |
College or University |
Location |
Member Limit |
| The NoZe Brotherhood |
1924 |
Baylor University |
Waco,
TX , United
States |
|
| The Turtle Mound
Society |
1901 |
Beloit College |
Beloit,
WI , United
States |
Senior Men |
| Sic Sic |
1946 |
Bowling Green State
University |
Bowling Green, OH , United
States |
Freshmen |
| The Franklin Society |
1824 |
Brown University |
Providence, RI , United
States |
|
| Seven
Society, Order of the Crown & Dagger |
1826 |
College of William and Mary |
Williamsburg, VA , United
States |
Senior Men |
| Flat Hat Club |
1916 originally 1750 |
College of William and Mary |
Williamsburg, VA , United
States |
Senior |
| Bishop James Madison
Society |
20th c. originally 1812. |
College of William and Mary |
Williamsburg, VA , United
States |
|
| Wren Society |
20th c. originally 1832 |
College of William and Mary |
Williamsburg, VA , United
States |
|
| St. Anthony Hall |
1847 |
Columbia University |
New York, NY , United
States |
Three Year |
| Sphinx Head |
1890 |
Cornell University |
Ithaca,
NY , United
States |
Senior |
| Quill and Dagger |
1893 |
Cornell University |
Ithaca,
NY , United
States |
Senior |
| Sphinx |
1886 |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Casque and Gauntlet |
1887 |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Dragon Society |
1898 |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Fire &
Skoal |
1975 |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Arabis |
Unknown |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Phoenix |
Unknown |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Gryphon |
Unknown |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Cobra |
Unknown |
Dartmouth College |
Hanover, NH , United
States |
Senior |
| Raven's Claw Society |
1896 |
Dickinson College |
Carlisle, PA , United
States |
Senior Men |
| D.V.S. Senior Honor Society |
1902 |
Emory University |
Atlanta, GA , United
States |
|
| Burning Spear Society |
1993 |
Florida State University |
Tallahassee, FL , United
States |
Senior |
| ANAK Society |
1908 |
Georgia Institute of
Technology |
Atlanta, GA , United
States |
Junior/Senior |
| The Society of Phitotmists |
1896 |
Johns Hopkins
University |
Baltimore, MD , United
States |
Honor Society/Men Only |
| Chi |
1900 |
Longwood University |
Farmville, VA , United
States |
|
| 1540 |
1998 |
Loyola University New
Orleans |
New Orleans, LA , United
States |
|
| Rho Mu Beta |
1979 |
Mercyhurst College |
Erie,
PA , United
States |
Male |
| Eucleian Society |
1832 |
New York University |
New York, NY , United
States |
|
| Mufti |
1940 |
Pomona College |
Claremont, CA,
United
States |
Women |
| Cap and Skull |
1900 |
Rutgers University |
New Brunswick, NJ , United
States |
Senior |
| Khoda |
1909 |
Stevens Institute of
Technology |
Hoboken, NJ , United
States |
Senior |
| Stickers |
1898 |
Texas A&M University |
College Station, TX , United
States |
Senior |
| The Machine |
1888 |
University of Alabama |
Tuscaloosa, AL , United
States |
select fraternities & sororities |
| Order of the Golden
Bear |
1900 |
University
of California, Berkeley |
Berkeley, CA , United
States |
Senior |
| The Gun Club |
1912 |
University
of California, Berkeley |
Berkeley, CA , United
States |
Third Year |
| Society of the Golden
Rose |
1942 |
University
of California, Berkeley |
Berkeley, CA , United States |
Women, Juniors/Seniors |
| Sigma Sigma |
1898 |
University of Cincinnati |
Cincinnati, OH ,United States |
Men, Junior/Senior |
| Men of METRO |
1946 |
University of Cincinnati |
Cincinnati, OH ,United States |
Men |
| Petal and Thorn |
1927 |
University of Delaware |
Newark, DE , United States |
Senior |
| Florida Blue Key |
1923 |
University of Florida |
Gainesville, FL , United States |
All |
| Order of the Greek
Horsemen |
1955 |
University of Georgia |
Athens, GA , United States |
Fraternity Men |
| Ma-Wan-Da |
1912 |
University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign |
Urbana, IL , United States |
Senior |
| The Senior Skull
Honor Society |
1906 |
University of Maine |
Orono,
ME , United States |
Senior Men |
| Iron Arrow Honor
Society |
1926 |
University of Miami |
Coral Gables, FL , United States |
Honor Society |
| Order of Angell |
1902 |
University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor |
Ann Arbor, MI , United States |
Senior |
| St. Anthony Hall |
1855 |
University of Mississippi |
University,
MS, United
States |
Men Only' |
| QEBH |
1897 |
University of Missouri |
Columbia, MO , United States |
Senior |
| LSV Society |
1907 |
University of Missouri |
Columbia, MO , United States |
Senior Women |
| Mystical Seven |
1907 |
University of Missouri |
Columbia, MO , United States |
Senior |
| OBC |
Unknown |
University of North Carolina at
Asheville |
Asheville, NC , United States |
|
| Dialectic and
Philanthropic Societies |
1795 |
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill |
Chapel Hill, NC , United States |
|
Order of Gimghoul |
1889 |
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill |
Chapel Hill, NC , United States |
Senior |
| Order of the Golden
Fleece |
1904 |
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill |
Chapel Hill, NC , United States |
Senior |
| Order of the
Grail-Valkyries |
1920 |
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill |
Chapel Hill, NC , United States |
Senior |
| The Loyal Knights of
Old Trusty |
1920 |
University of Oklahoma |
Norman, OK United States |
Engineering |
| The Philomathean
Society |
1813 |
University of Pennsylvania |
Philadelphia, Pa United States |
50 |
| Sphinx Senior Society |
1900 |
University of Pennsylvania |
Philadelphia,
PA, United
States |
Senior |
| Friars senior society |
1901 |
University of Pennsylvania |
Philadelphia,
PA, United
States |
Senior |
| Mortar Board |
1922 |
University of Pennsylvania |
Philadelphia,
PA, United
States |
Senior |
| Friar Society |
1911 |
University of Texas at
Austin |
Austin, TX , United States |
Senior |
| Episkopon |
1858 |
University of Trinity
College |
Toronto, ON , Canada |
All |
| Eli Banana |
1878 |
University of Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA , United States |
|
| T.I.L.K.A. |
1889 |
University of Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA , United States |
|
| Z Society |
1892 |
University of Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA , United States |
|
| IMP Society |
1902 |
University of Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA , United States |
|
| Seven Society |
1905 |
University of Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA , United States |
|
| Society
of the Purple Shadows |
1963 |
University of Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA , United States |
|
|
P.U.M.P.K.I.N.
Society |
1967 |
University of Virginia |
Charlottesville, VA , United States |
|
| ThurtenE |
1904 |
Washington
University in St. Louis |
St. Louis, MO , United States |
Junior |
| Cadaver Society |
1957 |
Washington and Lee
University |
Lexington, VA , United States |
|
| Mystical 7 |
1867 |
Wesleyan University |
Middletown, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Theta Nu Epsilon |
1870 |
Wesleyan University |
Middletown, CT , United States |
Sophomore |
| Skulls of Seven |
1898 |
Westminster College |
Fulton, MO , United States |
Senior |
| Mountain |
1867 |
West Virginia University |
Morgantown, WV , United States |
Senior |
| Iron Cross |
1902 |
University of
Wisconsin-Madison |
Madison, WI , United States |
Junior/Senior |
| The Skull |
1911 |
Worcester Polytechnic
Institute |
Worcester, MA , United States |
Senior |
Skull and Bones |
1832 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Scroll and Key |
1842 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Berzelius |
1848 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Book and Snake |
1863 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| St. Anthony Hall |
1867 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Three Year |
| Wolf's Head |
1883 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| St. Elmo |
1899 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Elihu |
1903 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Manuscript Society |
1952 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Mace and Chain |
1956 |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| Sage and Chalice |
20th c. |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| FNK |
20th or 21st Century |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
| D.S.G. |
20th or 21st Century |
Yale University |
New Haven, CT , United States |
Senior |
See also
References
- Yale Herald article accessed 2008-06-01
- The Spirit of Kappa Alpha - Robert Tarleton. Page 145.
- andruthsaid.net
- Bruce, IV:100.
- Dabney, 502.
- Dabney, 501.
-
http://media.www.thetrident.org/media/storage/paper467/news/2002/09/18/Opinion/Letters.To.The.Editor-276495-page3.shtml
- "F.H.C. Society," University Archives Subject File Collection, Special
Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library, College of
William and Mary
- Flat Hat
Club
- http://www.yalerumpus.com
- Dressing the Round Table in New
Clothes
- SICSIC: How to apply
- Dartmouth list of senior societies accessed
2008-05-16.
- http://www.jhu.edu/~jhumag/0906web/traditio.html
- Longwood Magazine Winter 2001
- The Maroon - SGA President asks two justices to
resign
- Sigma
Sigma at the University of Cincinnati accessed 2009-04-13.
- Men of METRO directory listing at the University of
Cincinnati accessed 2009-04-14.
- http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/uars/ead/40160.html
- http://www.dailytarheel.com/2.1383/1.191882
- http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/uars/ead/40161.html
-
http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/university-news/2006/04/06/societies-find-their-secret-niche/
-
http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/university-news/2006/04/06/societies-find-their-secret-niche/
Bibliography
External links