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{{Short description|Secret society headquartered at Yale University}}
{{Short description|Secret society based at Yale University, New Haven}}
{{Infobox organization
{{Infobox organization
| name = Wolf's Head Society
| name = Wolf's Head Society
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| professional_title = <!-- for professional associations -->
| professional_title = <!-- for professional associations -->
| headquarters = [[Yale University]]
| headquarters = [[Yale University]]
| location = [[New Haven, Connecticut]], [[United States]]
| location = [[New Haven, Connecticut]], U.S.
| coords = <!-- Coordinates of location using {{Coord}} -->
| coords = <!-- Coordinates of location using {{Coord}} -->
| region_served = [[United States]]
| region_served = [[United States]]
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| footnotes =
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}}
}}
'''Wolf's Head Society''' is a senior society at [[Yale University]] in [[New Haven]], [[Connecticut]], [[United States]]. The society is one of the reputed "Big Three" societies at Yale, along with [[Skull and Bones]] and [[Scroll and Key]].<ref>{{Cite Power Broker}}</ref> Active undergaduate membership is elected annually with sixteen Yale University students, typically rising seniors. Honorary members have been elected.
The current delegation spends its year together answerable to an alumni association. <ref>[http://www.yaledailynews.com/blog/2013/05/02/dear-wolf's-head "Dear Wolf's Head"], Blog, ''Yale Daily News'', 02 May 2013</ref><ref>[https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2017/10/05/new-book-ignites-society-debate/], article "New book ignites society debate", Britton O'Daly, ''Yale Daily News'', 5 Oct, 2017</ref><ref>[http://features.yaledailynews.com/blog/2017/02/24/the-choice-is-yours/ "The Choice is Yours"], Blog, ''Yale Daily News'', 24 February 2017</ref> Some past members have gained prominence in athletics, business, the fine arts and literaure, higher education, journalism, and politics.


'''Wolf's Head Society''' is a senior society at [[Yale University]] in [[New Haven]], [[Connecticut]]. The society is one of the reputed "Big Three" societies at Yale, along with [[Skull and Bones]] and [[Scroll and Key]].<ref>{{Cite Power Broker}}</ref> Active undergraduate membership is elected annually with sixteen Yale University students, typically rising seniors. Honorary members are elected.


The current delegation spends its year together answerable to an alumni association.<ref>[http://www.yaledailynews.com/blog/2013/05/02/dear-wolf's-head "Dear Wolf's Head"], Blog, ''Yale Daily News'', 02 May 2013</ref><ref>[https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2017/10/05/new-book-ignites-society-debate/], article "New book ignites society debate", Britton O'Daly, ''Yale Daily News'', 5 Oct, 2017</ref><ref>[http://features.yaledailynews.com/blog/2017/02/24/the-choice-is-yours/ "The Choice is Yours"], Blog, ''Yale Daily News'', 24 February 2017</ref> Some past members have gained prominence in athletics, business, the fine and literary arts, higher education, journalism, and politics.


==History==
==History==

Fifteen rising seniors from the Yale Class of 1884, with help from members of the Yale Class of 1883 who were considered publicly possible taps for the older societies, abetted the creation of '''The Third Society'''. The society changed its name to Wolf's Head five years later.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.library.yale.edu/mssa/YHO/timeline_text.html|title=Timeline of Selected Events in the History of Yale University |work=Resources on Yale History|publisher=Yale University Library|date=March 19, 2010|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Yale Alumni Publications, Inc.|url=http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/01_03/groups.html|title=March 2001 Tercentennial Edition - An Irrepressible Urge to Join |publisher=Yale Alumni Magazine|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref><ref name="assn">Andrews, John. ''History of the Founding of Wolf's Head'', Lancaster Press, 1934. Phelps Trust Association archives, [[Sterling Memorial Library]], Yale University.</ref>
Fifteen rising seniors from the Yale Class of 1884, with help from members of the Yale Class of 1883 who were considered publicly possible taps for the older societies, abetted the creation of '''The Third Society'''. The society changed its name to Wolf's Head five years later.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.library.yale.edu/mssa/YHO/timeline_text.html|title=Timeline of Selected Events in the History of Yale University |work=Resources on Yale History|publisher=Yale University Library|date=March 19, 2010|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Yale Alumni Publications, Inc.|url=http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/01_03/groups.html|title=March 2001 Tercentennial Edition - An Irrepressible Urge to Join |publisher=Yale Alumni Magazine|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref><ref name="assn">Andrews, John. ''History of the Founding of Wolf's Head'', Lancaster Press, 1934. Phelps Trust Association archives, [[Sterling Memorial Library]], Yale University.</ref>


The effort was aided by more than 300 [[Yale College]] alumni<ref>''Bulletin of Yale University,'' New Haven, 15 October 1932, Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1931 - 1932, pg. 32, Henry Blodget, B.A. 1875, and pg. 44, [[John Proctor Clarke]], B.A. 1878</ref><ref>Obituary Record of Yale University 1924 - 1925, Bulletin of Yale University, New Haven, Twenty-First Series, August 1, 1925, Number Twenty - Two, Abram Heaton Robertson, B.A. 1872, pg. 1316, Gardner Green, B.A. 1873, pg. 1319</ref> and a few [[Yale Law School]] faculty, in part to counter the dominance of the Skull and Bones Society in undergraduate and university affairs.<ref name="assn"/><ref>{{cite web|author=John Williams Andrews |url=https://openlibrary.org/b/OL6318007M/History_of_the_founding_of_Wolf's_Head|title=History of the founding of Wolf's Head|publisher=Open Library|date=2008-04-01|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>
The effort was aided by more than 300 [[Yale College]] alumni<ref>''Bulletin of Yale University,'' New Haven, 15 October 1932, Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1931 - 1932, pg. 32, Henry Blodget, B.A. 1875, and pg. 44, [[John Proctor Clarke]], B.A. 1878</ref><ref>Obituary Record of Yale University 1924 - 1925, Bulletin of Yale University, New Haven, Twenty-First Series, August 1, 1925, Number Twenty - Two, Abram Heaton Robertson, B.A. 1872, pg. 1316, Gardner Green, B.A. 1873, pg. 1319</ref> and a few [[Yale Law School]] faculty, in part to counter the dominance of the Skull and Bones Society in undergraduate and university affairs.<ref name="assn"/><ref>{{cite web|author=John Williams Andrews |url=https://openlibrary.org/b/OL6318007M/History_of_the_founding_of_Wolf's_Head|title=History of the founding of Wolf's Head|publisher=Open Library|date=2008-04-01|ol=6318007M |access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>


The founding defeated the last attempt by the administration or the student body to abolish secret or senior societies at Yale.<ref>Richards, David Alan. Skulls and Keys, Pegasus Books, Ltd. NY, NY, 2017, pp. 284 - 327, "The Solution of Wolf's Head (1883 - 1888)" pp. 284 - 327. {{ISBN|978-1-68177-517-3}}</ref> The tradition continued of creating and sustaining a society if enough potential rising seniors thought they had been overlooked: Bones was established in 1832 after a dispute over selections for [[Phi Beta Kappa]] awards; [[Scroll and Key Society]], the second society at Yale, was established in 1841 after a dispute over elections to Bones.
The founding defeated the last attempt by the administration or the student body to abolish secret or senior societies at Yale.<ref>Richards, David Alan. Skulls and Keys, Pegasus Books, Ltd. NY, NY, 2017, pp. 284 - 327, "The Solution of Wolf's Head (1883 - 1888)" pp. 284 - 327. {{ISBN|978-1-68177-517-3}}</ref> The tradition continued of creating and sustaining a society if enough potential rising seniors thought they had been overlooked: Bones was established in 1832 after a dispute over selections for [[Phi Beta Kappa]] awards; [[Scroll and Key Society]], the second society at Yale, was established in 1841 after a dispute over elections to Bones.
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From the mid-1840s until 1883, several societies were started, but each failed to sustain the interest of [[liberal arts]] students at Yale College, broadly known as the Academical Department.<ref>[[Alexandra Robbins|Robbins, Alexandra]]. ''Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths to Power''. [[Back Bay Books]], New York and Boston, pp. 61-62. {{ISBN|0-316-73561-2}}.</ref> Star and Dart, Sword and Crown, Tea-Kettle, Spade and Grave, and E.T.L. disbanded.<ref name="assn75">Andrews, p. 75.</ref>
From the mid-1840s until 1883, several societies were started, but each failed to sustain the interest of [[liberal arts]] students at Yale College, broadly known as the Academical Department.<ref>[[Alexandra Robbins|Robbins, Alexandra]]. ''Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths to Power''. [[Back Bay Books]], New York and Boston, pp. 61-62. {{ISBN|0-316-73561-2}}.</ref> Star and Dart, Sword and Crown, Tea-Kettle, Spade and Grave, and E.T.L. disbanded.<ref name="assn75">Andrews, p. 75.</ref>


Phi Beta Kappa was inactive at Yale from 1871 to 1884, coinciding in part with a national reorganization of the Society.<ref>''Joining the Club''. p. 22.</ref> In the 1820s, [[Anti-Masonic Party|Anti-Masonic]] agitation sweeping across the United States prompted PBK to examine the role of secrecy in its proceedings. Associated with PBK's national reorganization in 1881, secrecy disappeared as a signature among all chapters, quelling rivalry with collegiate [[fraternities and sororities|fraternities]], clubs and societies.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.clubs.psu.edu/PhiBetaKappa/hist.htm|title=Phi Beta Kappa - History|website=Clubs.psu.edu|access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref> Hence, secrecy was soon shelved at the Yale chapter.<ref name="conspiracyarchive.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.conspiracyarchive.com/NWO/Tombs_and_Taps.htm |title=Tombs and Taps, An inside look at Yale's Fraternities, Sororities and Societies |publisher=Conspiracyarchive.com|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref> PBK exists today, without any secrecy, as an [[academia|academic]] [[honor society]].
Phi Beta Kappa was inactive at Yale from 1871 to 1884, coinciding in part with a national reorganization of the society.<ref>''Joining the Club''. p. 22.</ref> In the 1820s, [[Anti-Masonic Party|Anti-Masonic]] agitation sweeping across the United States prompted PBK to examine the role of secrecy in its proceedings. Associated with PBK's national reorganization in 1881, secrecy disappeared as a signature among all chapters, quelling rivalry with collegiate [[Fraternities and sororities|fraternities]], clubs and societies.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.clubs.psu.edu/PhiBetaKappa/hist.htm|title=Phi Beta Kappa - History|website=Clubs.psu.edu|access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref> Hence, secrecy was soon shelved at the Yale chapter.<ref name="conspiracyarchive.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.conspiracyarchive.com/NWO/Tombs_and_Taps.htm |title=Tombs and Taps, An inside look at Yale's Fraternities, Sororities and Societies |publisher=Conspiracyarchive.com|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref> PBK exists today, without any secrecy, as an [[Academia|academic]] [[honor society]].


Beginning in the 1850s, the Yale undergraduate student body grew more diverse. The college was becoming an institution of national rather than regional importance. Students who hailed from environs beyond [[New England]] or who were not [[Congregationalist]] or [[Presbyterian]] entered the college in large numbers.<ref>Stephenson, Louise L. ''Scholarly Means to Evangelical Ends: The New Haven Scholars and the Transformation of Higher Learning in America''.[[The Johns Hopkins University Press]], 1986, p. 64; {{ISBN|0-8018-2695-0}}.</ref>
Beginning in the 1850s, the Yale undergraduate student body grew more diverse. The college was becoming an institution of national rather than regional importance. Students who hailed from environs beyond [[New England]] or who were not [[Congregationalist]] or [[Presbyterian]] entered the college in large numbers.<ref>Stephenson, Louise L. ''Scholarly Means to Evangelical Ends: The New Haven Scholars and the Transformation of Higher Learning in America''.[[The Johns Hopkins University Press]], 1986, p. 64; {{ISBN|0-8018-2695-0}}.</ref>
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Dissatisfaction grew: In 1873, ''The Iconoclast'', a student paper published once, {{dts|1873|10|13}}, advocated for the abolition of the society system. It opined: "Out of every class Skull and Bones takes its men...They have obtained control of Yale. Its business is performed by them. Money paid to the college must pass into their hands, and be subject to their will....It is Yale College against Skull and Bones!! We ask all men, as a question of right, which should be allowed to live?"<ref name="assn39">Andrews, p. 39.</ref><ref>Karabel, Jerome. ''[[The Chosen (Jerome Karabel)|The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton]]''. [[Houghton Mifflin Company]], Boston and New York, 2005. p. 56. {{ISBN|978-0-618-57458-2}}.</ref> The [[Yale Daily News]] first appeared on {{dts|1878|01|28}}. A memoir of the first college daily's birth records its first year strategy to "rag" the societies.<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 259</ref>
Dissatisfaction grew: In 1873, ''The Iconoclast'', a student paper published once, {{dts|1873|10|13}}, advocated for the abolition of the society system. It opined: "Out of every class Skull and Bones takes its men...They have obtained control of Yale. Its business is performed by them. Money paid to the college must pass into their hands, and be subject to their will....It is Yale College against Skull and Bones!! We ask all men, as a question of right, which should be allowed to live?"<ref name="assn39">Andrews, p. 39.</ref><ref>Karabel, Jerome. ''[[The Chosen (Jerome Karabel)|The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton]]''. [[Houghton Mifflin Company]], Boston and New York, 2005. p. 56. {{ISBN|978-0-618-57458-2}}.</ref> The [[Yale Daily News]] first appeared on {{dts|1878|01|28}}. A memoir of the first college daily's birth records its first year strategy to "rag" the societies.<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 259</ref>


The Class of 1884 agreed to support another revolt against the society system with a vote of no confidence to coincide with its graduation. It had been understood that the society system was beyond reform and might well be abolished.
The Class of 1884 unanimously agreed to support a new revolt against the society system by issuing a vote of no confidence to coincide with their graduation. There was a widespread understanding that the existing society system was irredeemable and likely to be abolished.


A spirited defense of the society system appeared in the {{dts|1884|05}} issue of [[The Yale Review|''The New Englander'']], written and published by members of Scroll and Key. Several periodicals reported regularly on the situation.<ref name="assn58">Andrews, pp. 58-61.</ref>
A spirited defense of the society system appeared in the {{dts|1884|05}} issue of [[The Yale Review|''The New Englander'']], written and published by members of Scroll and Key. Several periodicals reported regularly on the situation.<ref name="assn58">Andrews, pp. 58-61.</ref>
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==Point of view==
==Point of view==
Many pioneering and subsequent members mocked as [[On Bullshit|"poppycock"]] (from the Dutch for "soft excrement")<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/poppycock |title=Poppycock &#124; Definition of Poppycock by Merriam-Webster |website=Merriam-webster.com |access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref> the seemingly Masonic-inspired rituals and atmosphere associated with Skull and Bones. In their ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'' prank, Wolf's Head members persuaded the thespian pirate king to display the numbers 322 (part of the emblem of Skull and Bones) below a [[Jolly Roger|skull and crossbones]] at a local [[theatre]].<ref>''Secrets of the Tomb'', pp. 3-4, 67, 84-85.</ref> In another example, [[List of Presidents of Yale University|Yale President]] A. Whitney Griswold's deprecated the rituals as "bonesy bullshit" and "[[Stover at Yale|Dink Stover]] crap" coloring undergraduate life.<ref>''The Guardians.'' p. 155.</ref>
Many pioneering and subsequent members mocked as [[On Bullshit|"poppycock"]] (from the Dutch for "soft excrement")<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/poppycock |title=Poppycock &#124; Definition of Poppycock by Merriam-Webster |website=Merriam-webster.com |access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref> the seemingly [[Masonic ritual and symbolism|Masonic-inspired rituals and atmosphere]] associated with Skull and Bones. The sentiment was widespread in the Yale community particularly among undergraduates. In their ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'' prank, Wolf's Head members persuaded the thespian pirate king to display the numbers 322 (part of the emblem of Skull and Bones) below a [[Jolly Roger|skull and crossbones]] at a local [[theatre]].<ref>''Secrets of the Tomb'', pp. 3-4, 67, 84-85.</ref> In another example, [[List of Presidents of Yale University|Yale President]] A. Whitney Griswold's deprecated the rituals as "bonesy bullshit" and "[[Stover at Yale|Dink Stover]] crap" coloring undergraduate life.<ref>''The Guardians.'' p. 155.</ref>


Wolf's Head did maintain many traditional practices, such as the Thursday and Sunday meetings, which were common among its peers. [[Paul Moore, Jr.]], long-time Senior Fellow and successor trustee (1964 - 1990) for the [[Yale Corporation]] and long-tenured bishop in the [[Episcopal Church (United States)]], recalled the night before he first encountered combat in [[World War II]]: "I spent the evening on board ship being quizzed by [a friend from Harvard] about what went on in Wolf's Head. He could not believe I would hold back such irrelevant secrets the night before I faced possible death."<ref>Yale officers: Founding Trustees and their successors,[www.guides.library.yale.edu]</ref><ref>Moore, Paul. ''Presences: A Bishop's Life in the City''. [[Farrar, Straus, and Giroux]], New York, 1997. pp. 55-56; {{ISBN|0-374-23711-5}}.</ref>
Wolf's Head did maintain many traditional practices, such as the Thursday and Sunday meetings, which were common among its peers. [[Paul Moore, Jr.]], long-time Senior Fellow and successor trustee (1964 - 1990) for the [[Yale Corporation]] and long-tenured bishop in the [[Episcopal Church (United States)]], recalled the night before he first encountered combat in [[World War II]]: "I spent the evening on board ship being quizzed by [a friend from Harvard] about what went on in Wolf's Head. He could not believe I would hold back such irrelevant secrets the night before I faced possible death."<ref>Yale officers: Founding Trustees and their successors,[www.guides.library.yale.edu]</ref><ref>Moore, Paul. ''Presences: A Bishop's Life in the City''. [[Farrar, Straus, and Giroux]], New York, 1997. pp. 55-56; {{ISBN|0-374-23711-5}}.</ref>


==The Halls==
===Original Tomb===
The original tomb, or hall, was erected within months of the founding. The older Academical Department societies met originally for decades in rented quarters near campus. Skull and Bones opened its tomb in 1856, more than two decades after its founding.<ref>''Yale Alumni Magazine'', May/Jun 2015, "The Origins of the tomb: How Skull and Bones found a home", by David Richards</ref> Scroll and Key did likewise; it opened its tomb in 1869 more than two decades after the society's founding.
===Previous Tomb===

The "Old Hall" was erected within months of the founding. The older Academical Department societies met originally for decades in rented quarters near campus. Skull and Bones opened its tomb in 1856, more than two decades after its founding.<ref>''Yale Alumni Magazine'', May/Jun 2015, "The Origins of the tomb: How Skull and Bones found a home", by David Richards</ref> Scroll and Key did likewise; it opened its tomb in 1869 more than two decades after the society's founding.
[[File:Old Wolf's Head society hall built 1884 Yale College New Haven Connecticut.jpg|right|thumb|250px|"Old Hall" - designed by [[McKim, Mead and White]], completed in 1884. Purchased by University in 1924.]]
[[File:Old Wolf's Head society hall built 1884 Yale College New Haven Connecticut.jpg|right|thumb|250px|"Old Hall" - designed by [[McKim, Mead and White]], completed in 1884. Purchased by University in 1924.]]
*[[McKim, Mead and White]], firm of. 1884, former or "Old Hall" at 77 Prospect Street, across the street from the [[Grove Street Cemetery]], commissioned for the Phelps Trust Association, [[Richardsonian Romanesque]]. Purchased by the University in 1924, rented to [[Chi Psi]] fraternity (1924–29), Book and Bond (defunct society) (1934–35), and Vernon Hall (now [[Myth and Sword]]) (1944–54). Currently houses the Yale Institution for Social and Policy Studies.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yale.edu/isps|title=Institution for Social and Policy Studies|website=Yale.edu|access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref>
*The former domicile is located at 77 Prospect Street, across the street from the [[Grove Street Cemetery]], was [[Richardsonian Romanesque|a Richardsonian Romanesque]] building commissioned for the Phelps Trust Association and designed by the architectural firm [[McKim, Mead and White]]. It was completed in 1884. It was purchased by the university in 1924, rented to [[Chi Psi]] fraternity (1924–29), Book and Bond (defunct society) (1934–35), and Vernon Hall (now [[Myth and Sword]]) (1944–54). It currently houses the Yale Institution for Social and Policy Studies.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yale.edu/isps|title=Institution for Social and Policy Studies|website=Yale.edu|access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref>


A building with narrow [[window]]s, the "Old Hall" was noted as "the most modern and handsomest" of the society domiciles by ''[[The New York Times]]'' in 1903. The building was erected in 1884 soon after the founding members secured financing.<ref name="assn"/>
A building with narrow [[window]]s, the domicile was noted as "the most modern and handsomest" of same purpose structures by ''[[The New York Times]]'' in 1903. The building was erected in 1884 soon after the founding members secured financing.<ref name="assn"/>
*[[Bertram Goodhue]], architect, designed "New Hall", ca. 1924; built posthumously. Goodhue was a protege of [[James Renwick Jr.]], architect of the first [[St. Anthony Hall]] chapter house in [[New York City]].<ref name="Kelley, Brooks Mather p. 374"/>
The building has stone wall and wrought iron fencing, and is central to the largest secret society compound on campus. The compound commands the most prominent location on campus beyond [[Harkness Tower]], the very icon of Yale,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yale.edu/carillon/yamasaki.htm|title=Yale University Guild of Carillonneurs - Harkness Carillon and Guild Information|website=Yale.edu|access-date=2016-09-04|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20001109052100/http://www.yale.edu/carillon/yamasaki.htm|archive-date=2000-11-09}}</ref> and the [[Memorial Quadrangle]].


===Current Tomb===
===Current Tomb===
*[[Bertram Goodhue]], architect, designed the "New Hall", ca. 1924; it was built posthumously. Goodhue was a protege of [[James Renwick Jr.]], architect of the first [[St. Anthony Hall]] chapter house in [[New York City]].<ref name="Kelley, Brooks Mather p. 374"/>
The building has stone wall and wrought iron fencing, and is central to the largest secret society compound on campus. The compound commands the most prominent location on campus beyond [[Harkness Tower]], the very icon of Yale,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yale.edu/carillon/yamasaki.htm|title=Yale University Guild of Carillonneurs - Harkness Carillon and Guild Information|website=Yale.edu|access-date=2016-09-04|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20001109052100/http://www.yale.edu/carillon/yamasaki.htm|archive-date=2000-11-09}}</ref> and the [[Memorial Quadrangle]].

[[File:Yale Wolf's Head walled distance.JPG|right|thumb|240px|Goodhue's evocative Wolf's Head Society building, shown behind its high stone enclosure.]]
[[File:Yale Wolf's Head walled distance.JPG|right|thumb|240px|Goodhue's evocative Wolf's Head Society building, shown behind its high stone enclosure.]]


The "New Hall" opened in the mid 1920s and sits fronted by York Street surrounded by the ''[[Yale Daily News]]'' [[Briton Hadden]] Memorial building, and the [[Yale Drama School]] and theatre, both gifts to Yale from Edward Harkness.<ref name="Kelley, Brooks Mather p. 374">Kelley, Brooks Mather.''Yale: A History'', Yale University Press, New Haven and London. p. 374. {{ISBN|0-300-01636-0}}.</ref> It is near the former homes of the Fence Club (or [[Psi Upsilon]], 224 York Street), [[Delta Kappa Epsilon|DKE]] (232 York Street) and [[Zeta Psi]] (212 York Street).
The domicile opened in the mid-1920s and sits fronted by York Street surrounded by the ''[[Yale Daily News]]'' [[Briton Hadden]] Memorial building, and the [[David Geffen School of Drama at Yale University]]. The original School of Drama and theatre as well as the Briton Hadden Memorial Building, were gifts to Yale from Edward Harkness.<ref name="Kelley, Brooks Mather p. 374">Kelley, Brooks Mather.''Yale: A History'', Yale University Press, New Haven and London. p. 374. {{ISBN|0-300-01636-0}}.</ref> It is near the former homes of the Fence Club (or [[Psi Upsilon]], 224 York Street), [[Delta Kappa Epsilon|DKE]] (232 York Street) and [[Zeta Psi]] (212 York Street).


==Membership==
==Membership==
The society has been reputed to tap the gregarious "[[university preparatory|prep school]] type".<ref name="yale56.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.yale56.org/Comment%2056/inside_eli.htm |title=Inside Eli, or How to Get On at Yale|publisher=Yale56.org|date=1955–56|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref><ref>''Secrets of the Tomb''. p. 69.</ref> Past members were associated intimately with the: [[Sam Chauncey|coeducation of Yale College]],<ref>"The Guardians". p. 64</ref> [[Edward Harkness|establishment of the Yale residential college system and the Harvard house system]],<ref>{{cite journal |author2=Yale Alumni Publications, Inc.|url=http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/2008_05/old_yale.html|date=May–June 2008 |title=How the Colleges Were Born |author1=Judith Ann Schiff|journal=Yale Alumni Magazine: Old Yale |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080522125640/http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/2008_05/old_yale.html |archive-date=2008-05-22 |access-date=2013-10-09}}</ref> [[Alexander Smith Cochran|founding of the Elizabethan Club]],<ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1911/11/20/104843291.pdf "Real Shakespeare Treasures For Yale"] (PDF). ''[[The New York Times]]'', November 20, 1911.</ref> and [[A. Whitney Griswold|founding of the Yale Political Union]].<ref>''The Guardians''. p. 51.</ref> This was Yale's last all-male society; it has tapped women since the spring of 1992.<ref>[http://www.deseretnews.com/article/199795/YALE-WOLFS-HEAD-ADMITS-WOMEN.html "Yale Wolf's Head Admits Women"]. ''[[Deseret News]]'', December 19, 1991.</ref>
The society has been reputed to tap the gregarious "[[University preparatory|prep school]] type".<ref name="yale56.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.yale56.org/Comment%2056/inside_eli.htm |title=Inside Eli, or How to Get On at Yale|publisher=Yale56.org|date=1955–56|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref><ref>''Secrets of the Tomb''. p. 69.</ref> Past members were associated intimately with the: [[Sam Chauncey|coeducation of Yale College]],<ref>"The Guardians". p. 64</ref> [[Edward Harkness|establishment of the Yale residential college system and the Harvard house system]],<ref>{{cite journal |author2=Yale Alumni Publications, Inc.|url=http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/2008_05/old_yale.html|date=May–June 2008 |title=How the Colleges Were Born |author1=Judith Ann Schiff|journal=Yale Alumni Magazine: Old Yale |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080522125640/http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/2008_05/old_yale.html |archive-date=2008-05-22 |access-date=2013-10-09}}</ref> [[Alexander Smith Cochran|founding of the Elizabethan Club]],<ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1911/11/20/104843291.pdf "Real Shakespeare Treasures For Yale"] (PDF). ''[[The New York Times]]'', November 20, 1911.</ref> and [[A. Whitney Griswold|founding of the Yale Political Union]].<ref>''The Guardians''. p. 51.</ref>
This was Yale's last all-male society. Women have been tapped since the spring of 1992.<ref>[http://www.deseretnews.com/article/199795/YALE-WOLFS-HEAD-ADMITS-WOMEN.html "Yale Wolf's Head Admits Women"]. ''[[Deseret News]]'', December 19, 1991.</ref>


Edward John Phelps, [[Diplomacy|Envoy]] to the [[Court of St. James's]], accepted the offer in 1885 to be namesake to the Wolf's Head alumni association.<ref name="assn"/> The Phelps Association, as of January 2016, holds in trust nearly seven million dollars, second among Yale societies or clubs.<ref>''Business Insider'', Jan. 5, 2016, 5:01 ET, by line Abby Jackson</ref>
Edward John Phelps, [[Diplomacy|Envoy]] to the [[Court of St. James's]], accepted the offer in 1885 to be namesake to the Wolf's Head alumni association.<ref name="assn"/> The Phelps Association, as of January 2016, holds in trust nearly seven million dollars, second among Yale societies or clubs.<ref>''Business Insider'', Jan. 5, 2016, 5:01 ET, by line Abby Jackson</ref>


Yale societies contrast sharply with [[Officially unrecognized Harvard College social clubs|Harvard finals clubs]] on membership criteria. Contributions to undergraduate life has been historically among the criteria for membership in Yale societies. Finals clubs overlook that quality among prospective members.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.thecrimson.com/article/1953/12/9/eleven-final-clubs-from-pig-to/|title=Eleven Final Clubs: From Pig to Bat &#124; News &#124; the Harvard Crimson}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1999/3/18/yales-finest-hours-pyales-secret-societies/|title = YAle's FINEST HOURS &#124; News &#124; the Harvard Crimson}}</ref>
Yale societies contrast sharply with [[Officially unrecognized Harvard College social clubs|Harvard finals clubs]] on membership criteria. Contributions to undergraduate life has been historically among the criteria for membership in Yale societies. Finals clubs overlook that quality among prospective members.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.thecrimson.com/article/1953/12/9/eleven-final-clubs-from-pig-to/|title=Eleven Final Clubs: From Pig to Bat &#124; News &#124; the Harvard Crimson}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1999/3/18/yales-finest-hours-pyales-secret-societies/|title = YALE's FINEST HOURS &#124; News &#124; the Harvard Crimson}}</ref>


==Notable members==
==Notable members==
Line 134: Line 134:
[[File:DavidBrewer.jpg|thumb|right|[[David Josiah Brewer]], Associate Justice of the Supreme Court]]
[[File:DavidBrewer.jpg|thumb|right|[[David Josiah Brewer]], Associate Justice of the Supreme Court]]
[[File:RogersClarkBallardMorton.jpg|thumb|left|[[Rogers Morton]] (1937), [[United States House of Representatives|US Representative]], 22nd [[U.S. Secretary of Commerce|Secretary of Commerce]], and 39th [[United States Secretary of the Interior|Secretary of the Interior]]]]
[[File:RogersClarkBallardMorton.jpg|thumb|left|[[Rogers Morton]] (1937), [[United States House of Representatives|US Representative]], 22nd [[U.S. Secretary of Commerce|Secretary of Commerce]], and 39th [[United States Secretary of the Interior|Secretary of the Interior]]]]
[[File:CharlesEdwardIves1913.jpg|thumb|right|[[Charles Ives]] (1898), American modernist composer]]
[[File:CharlesEdwardIves1913.jpg|thumb|right|[[Charles Ives]] (1898), American modernist composer]]
[[File:Edward S Harkness Met.jpg|thumb|left|[[Edward Harkness]] (1896), philanthropist and major benefactor to [[Yale University|Yale]]]]
[[File:Edward S Harkness Met.jpg|thumb|left|[[Edward Harkness]] (1896), philanthropist and major benefactor to [[Yale University|Yale]]]]
[[File:A. Conger Goodyear (Army officer, businessman, philanthropist).jpg|thumb|right|[[Anson Goodyear]] (1899), philanthropist and first president of [[Museum of Modern Art]]]]
[[File:A. Conger Goodyear (Army officer, businessman, philanthropist).jpg|thumb|right|[[Anson Goodyear]] (1899), philanthropist and first president of [[Museum of Modern Art]]]]
[[File:Stephen Vincent Benét Yale College BA 1919.jpg|thumb|left|[[Stephen Vincent Benét]] (1919) Pulitzer Prize–winning American poet, short story writer, and novelist]]
[[File:Stephen Vincent Benét Yale College BA 1919.jpg|thumb|left|[[Stephen Vincent Benét]] (1919) Pulitzer Prize–winning American poet, short story writer, and novelist]]
*[[Malcolm Baldrige, Jr.]], former [[U.S. Secretary of Commerce]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/12540892/The-Skulls-and-Bones-Exposed|title=The Skulls and Bones Exposed|publisher=Scribd.com|date=2009-02-18|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>
*[[Malcolm Baldrige, Jr.]], former [[U.S. Secretary of Commerce]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/12540892/The-Skulls-and-Bones-Exposed|title=The Skulls and Bones Exposed|publisher=Scribd.com|date=2009-02-18|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>
*[[Leigh Bardugo]] (1997), Israeli-American author<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.npr.org/2019/10/06/767636941/leigh-bardugo-on-ninth-house|title=Leigh Bardugo On 'Ninth House'|website=NPR.org|language=en|access-date=2019-12-04}}</ref>
*[[Leigh Bardugo]] (1997), Israeli–American author<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.npr.org/2019/10/06/767636941/leigh-bardugo-on-ninth-house|title=Leigh Bardugo On 'Ninth House'|website=NPR.org|language=en|access-date=2019-12-04}}</ref>
*[[Charles L. Bartlett (journalist)|Charles L. Bartlett]], Pulitzer Prize winning journalist
*[[Charles L. Bartlett (journalist)|Charles L. Bartlett]], Pulitzer Prize winning journalist
*[[Donald Beer]] (1957), Competition Rower and Olympic Champion<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1957, pg. 47</ref>
*[[Donald Beer]] (1957), Competition Rower and Olympic Champion<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1957, pg. 47</ref>
*[[Stephen Vincent Benet]] (1919), Pulitzer Prize–winning American poet, short story writer, and novelist<ref name="Yalensis84.6">{{cite journal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4T9MAAAAMAAJ&q=ashbel+gulliver&pg=PA269|title=Memorabilia Yalensis|journal=The Yale Literary Magazine|volume=84|issue=6|page=269|date=June 1919|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>
*[[Stephen Vincent Benét]] (1919), Pulitzer Prize–winning American poet, short story writer, and novelist<ref name="Yalensis84.6">{{cite journal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4T9MAAAAMAAJ&q=ashbel+gulliver&pg=PA269|title=Memorabilia Yalensis|journal=The Yale Literary Magazine|volume=84|issue=6|page=269|date=June 1919|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>
*[[Clarence Winthrop Bowen]] (1883), American author of historical essays<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 302</ref>
*[[Clarence Winthrop Bowen]] (1883), American author of historical essays<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 302</ref>
*[[David Josiah Brewer]], Justice of the [[List of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States|US Supreme Court]]<ref>''Skull and Keys'', pg. 319</ref>
*[[David Josiah Brewer]], Justice of the [[List of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States|US Supreme Court]]<ref>''Skull and Keys'', pg. 319</ref>
*Paul Butler, (1982), law professor, media commentator
*[[James Smith Bush]] (1844), Episcopal priest
*[[John Charlesworth (American football)|John Charlesworth]] (1929), American football player<ref>Yale University ''Banner'' and ''Pot Pourri'' yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1929, pg.109</ref>
*[[William H.T. Bush]] (1950), Businessperson
*[[Thomas Charlton (rower)|Thomas Charlton]] (1956), competition rower and Olympic medalist<ref>Yale ''Pot Pourri'' and ''Banner'' yearbook, Class of 1956, pg. 43</ref>
*[[John Charlesworth (American football)|John Charlesworth]] (1929), American football player<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot
Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1929, pg.109</ref>
*[[Thomas Charlton (rower)|Thomas Charlton]] (1956), competition rower and Olympic medalist<ref>Yale Pot Pourri and Banner yearbook, Class of 1956, pg. 43</ref>
*[[Sam Chauncey]] (1957), [[Yale University|Yale]] administrator<ref>''The Chosen'', p. 653.</ref>
*[[Sam Chauncey]] (1957), [[Yale University|Yale]] administrator<ref>''The Chosen'', p. 653.</ref>
*[[John Proctor Clarke]], Justice of the New York Supreme Court<ref>Bulletin of Yale University, New Haven 15 October 1932, Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1931 - 1932</ref>
*[[John Proctor Clarke]], Justice of the New York Supreme Court<ref>Bulletin of Yale University, New Haven 15 October 1932, Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1931 - 1932</ref>
Line 157: Line 155:
*[[Mark Dayton]] (1978), retired Minnesota senator and governor
*[[Mark Dayton]] (1978), retired Minnesota senator and governor
*[[Robert B. Fiske|Robert Fiske]] (1952), attorney and law partner<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Yale Class of 1952, pg. 39</ref>
*[[Robert B. Fiske|Robert Fiske]] (1952), attorney and law partner<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Yale Class of 1952, pg. 39</ref>
*Jonathan Foote (1958), American architect
*[[William Clay Ford Sr.|William Clay Ford]] (1949), businessman and heir<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Yale Class of 1949</ref>
*[[William Clay Ford Sr.|William Clay Ford]] (1949), businessman and heir<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Yale Class of 1949</ref>
*[[Richard Gilder]] (1954), philanthropist and businessman<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1954, pg. 35</ref>
*[[Richard Gilder]] (1954), philanthropist and businessman<ref>Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1954, pg. 35</ref>
*[[Paul Goldberger]] (1972), architecture critic<ref name="Lydon">[http://www.blogs.law.harvard.edu/lydon"Dem Bones, Dem Bones...and the Magic of Yale"], Harvard.edu, August 30, 2004.</ref>
*[[Paul Goldberger]] (1972), architecture critic<ref name="Lydon">[http://www.blogs.law.harvard.edu/lydon"Dem Bones, Dem Bones...and the Magic of Yale"], Harvard.edu, August 30, 2004.</ref>
*[[A. Conger Goodyear]] (1899), philanthropist and 1st President of [[Museum of Modern Art]]<ref>Box/folder number, Mss. A. Conger Goodyear Papers, 1683 - 1964 (bulk 1885 - 1964), Research Library, Buffalo History Museum,</ref>
*[[A. Conger Goodyear]] (1899), philanthropist and first President of [[Museum of Modern Art]]<ref>Box/folder number, Mss. A. Conger Goodyear Papers, 1683 - 1964 (bulk 1885 - 1964), Research Library, Buffalo History Museum,</ref>
*[[A. Whitney Griswold]] (1929), 16th [[List of presidents of Yale University|President of Yale]]<ref>''Joining the Club'', p. 182.</ref>
*[[A. Whitney Griswold]] (1929), 16th [[List of presidents of Yale University|President of Yale]]<ref>''Joining the Club'', p. 182.</ref>
*[[Edwin S. Grosvenor]] (1973), President and Editor-in-Chief of ''[[American Heritage (magazine)|American Heritage]]''
*[[Edwin S. Grosvenor]] (1973), President and Editor-in-Chief of ''[[American Heritage (magazine)|American Heritage]]''
Line 176: Line 175:
*[[Douglas MacArthur II]] (1932), American diplomat<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=douglas%20macarthur%20II,%20psi%20upsilon%20and%20wolf's%20head%20society|title=Google|access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref>
*[[Douglas MacArthur II]] (1932), American diplomat<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=douglas%20macarthur%20II,%20psi%20upsilon%20and%20wolf's%20head%20society|title=Google|access-date=2016-09-04}}</ref>
*[[Wayne MacVeagh]], American politician and former [[United States Attorney General]]<ref name="Skulls and Keys, p. 319">''Skulls and Keys'', p. 319</ref>
*[[Wayne MacVeagh]], American politician and former [[United States Attorney General]]<ref name="Skulls and Keys, p. 319">''Skulls and Keys'', p. 319</ref>
*Felix Matos Rodriguez (1984), Chancellor, City University of New York
*[[William Matthews (poet)|William Matthews]] (1965), poet, winner of the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize
*[[William Matthews (poet)|William Matthews]] (1965), poet, winner of the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize
*[[Edwin Albert Merritt|Edwin Merritt]] (1884), New York Politician<ref>Andrews, John, The Founding of Wolf's Head Society, Lancaster Press, pg. 70</ref>
*[[Edwin Albert Merritt|Edwin Merritt]] (1884), New York Politician<ref>Andrews, John, The Founding of Wolf's Head Society, Lancaster Press, pg. 70</ref>
*[[Clark Millikan]] (1924), American academic<ref name="Caltech obituary">[http://calteches.library.caltech.edu/253/01/clark.pdf "Caltech obituary - Clark"]. Caltech.edu; accessed September 14, 2016.</ref><ref>Yale University Banner and Pou Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1924, pg. 89</ref>
*[[Clark Millikan]] (1924), American academic<ref name="Caltech obituary">[http://calteches.library.caltech.edu/253/01/clark.pdf "Caltech obituary - Clark"]. Caltech.edu; accessed September 14, 2016.</ref><ref>Yale University Banner and Pou Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1924, pg. 89</ref>
*[[Roger Milliken]] (1937), American heir, industrialist, and businessman<ref>Six Yale Societies Elect 90 Members, New York Times, May 8, 1936</ref>
*[[Roger Milliken]] (1937), American heir, industrialist, and businessman<ref>Six Yale Societies Elect 90 Members, New York Times, May 8, 1936</ref>
*[[Douglas Moore]] (1915), composer and author<ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1915/05/21/100153969.pdf "Yale's Great Oak Sees 'Tap Day' Again"], ''[[The New York Times]]''. May 21, 1915. p. 8.</ref>
*[[Douglas Moore]] (1915), American composer and author<ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1915/05/21/100153969.pdf "Yale's Great Oak Sees 'Tap Day' Again"], ''[[The New York Times]]''. May 21, 1915. p. 8.</ref>
*[[Paul Moore, Jr.|Paul Moore]], American bishop<ref>[[Honor Moore|Moore, Honor]].''The Bishop's Daughter, A Memoir'', First Edition, [[W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.]], New York, 2008. p. 30. {{ISBN|978-0-393-05984-7}}.</ref>
*[[Paul Moore, Jr.|Paul Moore]], American bishop<ref>[[Honor Moore|Moore, Honor]].''The Bishop's Daughter, A Memoir'', First Edition, [[W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.]], New York, 2008. p. 30. {{ISBN|978-0-393-05984-7}}.</ref>
*[[Paul Moore, Sr.]] (1908), American businessman<ref>''My Harvard, My Yale'', editor, Diana DuBois, chapter "A Touch of Laughter", author, Rt. Rev. Paul Moore, Random House, New York, 1982, {{ISBN|0-394-51920-5}}</ref>
*[[Paul Moore, Sr.]] (1908), American businessman<ref>''My Harvard, My Yale'', editor, Diana DuBois, chapter "A Touch of Laughter", author, Rt. Rev. Paul Moore, Random House, New York, 1982, {{ISBN|0-394-51920-5}}</ref>
*[[John Morrison (ice hockey, born 1945)|Jack Morrison]] (1967), American ice hockey Olympic athlete<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri, Class of 1967, New Haven, CT, 1967, pg. 244</ref>
*[[John Morrison (ice hockey, born 1945)|Jack Morrison]] (1967), American ice hockey Olympic athlete<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1937, pg. 67</ref>
*[[Rogers C.B. Morton]] (1937), [[United States House of Representatives|US Representative]] and Secretary<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1937, pg. 67</ref>
*[[Thruston Morton]] (1929), [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]]<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1929, pg. 109</ref>
*[[Thruston Morton]] (1929), [[United States Senate|US Senator]]<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1929, pg. 109</ref>
*[[Rogers C. B. Morton]], U.S. Representative, [[United States Secretary of the Interior]], and [[United States Secretary of Commerce]]
*[[Edward John Phelps]], Lawyer and diplomat<ref>{{cite news|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F00C15FB3E5B11738DDDAB0994DB405B808CF1D3|title=Funeral of E.J. Phelps - Ex-President Dwight of Yale Pays a Feeling Tribute to the Dead - Interment in Vermont|newspaper=[[New York Times]]|date= March 11, 1900|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>
*[[Edward John Phelps]], Lawyer and diplomat<ref>{{cite news|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F00C15FB3E5B11738DDDAB0994DB405B808CF1D3|title=Funeral of E.J. Phelps - Ex-President Dwight of Yale Pays a Feeling Tribute to the Dead - Interment in Vermont|newspaper=[[New York Times]]|date= March 11, 1900|access-date=2011-08-01}}</ref>
*[[Philip W. Pillsbury]] (1924), Chair of [[Pillsbury Company]]<ref name="Caltech obituary"/><ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1924, pg. 89</ref>
*[[Philip W. Pillsbury]] (1924), Chair of [[Pillsbury Company]]<ref name="Caltech obituary"/><ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1924, pg. 89</ref>
*[[Ducky Pond]] (1925), American football and baseball player<ref>The Bridgeport Telegraph, Friday, May 16, 1924, pg. 28 and Saturday, May 17, 1924, pg. 16</ref>
*[[Ducky Pond]] (1925), American football and baseball player<ref>The Bridgeport Telegraph, Friday, May 16, 1924, pg. 28 and Saturday, May 17, 1924, pg. 16</ref>
*[[Geoffrey Robinson]], British politician and businessperson
*[[Geoffrey Robinson (politician)|Geoffrey Robinson]], British politician and businessperson
*[[Benno C. Schmidt, Jr.]], 20th [[List of presidents of Yale University|President of Yale]]<ref name="YaleRattle">{{cite news|url=http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2006/apr/18/rattling-those-dry-bones|title=Rattling Those Dry Bones|last=Cedotal|first=Andrew|date=April 18, 2006|newspaper=[[Yale Daily News]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110801000000/http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2006/apr/18/rattling-those-dry-bones|archive-date=2011-08-01}}<!-- odd - page doesn't load except via archive--></ref>
*[[Benno C. Schmidt, Jr.]], 20th [[List of presidents of Yale University|President of Yale]]<ref name="YaleRattle">{{cite news|url=http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2006/apr/18/rattling-those-dry-bones|title=Rattling Those Dry Bones|last=Cedotal|first=Andrew|date=April 18, 2006|newspaper=[[Yale Daily News]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110801000000/http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/2006/apr/18/rattling-those-dry-bones|archive-date=2011-08-01}}<!-- odd - page doesn't load except via archive--></ref>
*[[Kurt Schmoke]] (1971), American lawyer and politician<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 657</ref>
*[[Kurt Schmoke]] (1971), American lawyer and politician<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 657</ref>
*[[Raymond Seitz]], (1963), American ambassador to the United Kingdom
*[[Edmund Clarence Stedman]], American poet, critic, essayist, banker, and scientist<ref name="Skull and Keys, p. 319"/>
*[[Edmund Clarence Stedman]], American poet, critic, essayist, banker, and scientist<ref name="Skull and Keys, p. 319"/>
*[[Tom Steyer]] (1979), American business man and liberal political activist<ref>[http://yaleherald.com/bulldog/secret-society-2013-who-they-are-and-how-they-got-in "Secret Society 2013: Who they are, and how they got in!"], yaleherald.com, April 21, 2012; retrieved 2012-12-11.</ref>
*[[Tom Steyer]] (1979), American business man and liberal political activist<ref>[http://yaleherald.com/bulldog/secret-society-2013-who-they-are-and-how-they-got-in "Secret Society 2013: Who they are, and how they got in!"], yaleherald.com, April 21, 2012; retrieved 2012-12-11.</ref>
*[[William Earl Dodge Stokes]], Businessman and urban developer<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 303</ref>
*[[William Earl Dodge Stokes]], American businessman and urban developer<ref>''Skulls and Keys'', p. 303</ref>
*[[Sam Wagstaff]], American art curator and collector<ref>Morrisroe, Patricia. ''[[Robert Mapplethorpe|Mapplethorpe]]: A Biography'', Random House, New York, 1995. p. 115; {{ISBN|0-786-74975-X}}.</ref>
*[[Sam Wagstaff]], American art curator and collector<ref>Morrisroe, Patricia. ''[[Robert Mapplethorpe|Mapplethorpe]]: A Biography'', Random House, New York, 1995. p. 115; {{ISBN|0-786-74975-X}}.</ref>
*[[Rusty Wailes]] (1958), American rower<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, Class of 1958, New Haven, CT, pg. 61</ref>[[Arthur Williams Wright|right]], American academic and physicist<ref name="Skulls and Keys, p. 319" />
*[[Rusty Wailes]] (1958), American rower<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, Class of 1958, New Haven, CT, pg. 61</ref>
*[[Clarissa Ward]] (2002), Emmy award winning American journalist
*[[Clarissa Ward]] (2002), Emmy award-winning American journalist
*George ("Frolic") Weymouth (1958), American painter and conservationist
*[[Douglas Wick]] (1976) Academy Award winning film producer
*[[Arthur Williams Wright]] (1859), American physicist
*[[Doug Wright]] (1985), Pulitzer Prize winning American playwright, librettist, and screenwriter<ref>[http://www.houstonclassmates.com > FamousAlumni.asp]</ref>
*[[Douglas Wick]] (1976), Academy Award-winning film producer
*[[William Wrigley III]] (1954), president of the [[Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company]]<ref>Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1954, pg. 35</ref>
*[[Doug Wright]] (1985), Pulitzer Prize winning American playwright, librettist, and screenwriter<ref>[http://www.houstonclassmates.com > FamousAlumni.asp]</ref>
*[[William Wrigley III]] (1954), president of the [[Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company]]


==Notes==
==Notes==

Latest revision as of 10:09, 1 July 2024

Wolf's Head Society
Formation1883; 141 years ago (1883)
TypeSecret society
local
HeadquartersYale University
Location
Region served
United States

Wolf's Head Society is a senior society at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. The society is one of the reputed "Big Three" societies at Yale, along with Skull and Bones and Scroll and Key.[1] Active undergraduate membership is elected annually with sixteen Yale University students, typically rising seniors. Honorary members are elected.

The current delegation spends its year together answerable to an alumni association.[2][3][4] Some past members have gained prominence in athletics, business, the fine and literary arts, higher education, journalism, and politics.

History[edit]

Fifteen rising seniors from the Yale Class of 1884, with help from members of the Yale Class of 1883 who were considered publicly possible taps for the older societies, abetted the creation of The Third Society. The society changed its name to Wolf's Head five years later.[5][6][7]

The effort was aided by more than 300 Yale College alumni[8][9] and a few Yale Law School faculty, in part to counter the dominance of the Skull and Bones Society in undergraduate and university affairs.[7][10]

The founding defeated the last attempt by the administration or the student body to abolish secret or senior societies at Yale.[11] The tradition continued of creating and sustaining a society if enough potential rising seniors thought they had been overlooked: Bones was established in 1832 after a dispute over selections for Phi Beta Kappa awards; Scroll and Key Society, the second society at Yale, was established in 1841 after a dispute over elections to Bones.

The Third Society's founding was motivated in part by sentiment among some young men that they deserved insider status. "[A] certain limited number were firmly convinced that there had been an appalling miscarriage of justice in their individual omission from the category of the elect," some founders agreed.[7][12][13]

Antecedents[edit]

Before the founding in 1780 at Yale of the Connecticut Alpha chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the second chapter established after that society's founding in 1776 (which still practices a secret handshake among members),[14] Yale College students established and joined literary societies.[15] By the 1830s, the campus literary societies Linonia, Brothers in Unity, and Calliopean had lost stature. Calliopean folded in 1853, and the others shut down after the American Civil War.[16] Calliopean, Linonia, and Brothers in Unity existed respectively: 1819–1853, 1768–1878, and 1735–1868.[17]

From the mid-1840s until 1883, several societies were started, but each failed to sustain the interest of liberal arts students at Yale College, broadly known as the Academical Department.[18] Star and Dart, Sword and Crown, Tea-Kettle, Spade and Grave, and E.T.L. disbanded.[19]

Phi Beta Kappa was inactive at Yale from 1871 to 1884, coinciding in part with a national reorganization of the society.[20] In the 1820s, Anti-Masonic agitation sweeping across the United States prompted PBK to examine the role of secrecy in its proceedings. Associated with PBK's national reorganization in 1881, secrecy disappeared as a signature among all chapters, quelling rivalry with collegiate fraternities, clubs and societies.[21] Hence, secrecy was soon shelved at the Yale chapter.[22] PBK exists today, without any secrecy, as an academic honor society.

Beginning in the 1850s, the Yale undergraduate student body grew more diverse. The college was becoming an institution of national rather than regional importance. Students who hailed from environs beyond New England or who were not Congregationalist or Presbyterian entered the college in large numbers.[23]

The faculty and administration were dominated by alumni of Bones, numbering four out of five faculty members between 1865 and 1916. Bones alumni were university secretaries from 1869 to 1921. Bones alumni were university treasurers for forty-three of the forty-eight years between 1862 - 1910.[24][25] Five of the first six Yale Corporation elected Alumni Fellows were members of Bones.[26]

Dissatisfaction grew: In 1873, The Iconoclast, a student paper published once, October 13, 1873, advocated for the abolition of the society system. It opined: "Out of every class Skull and Bones takes its men...They have obtained control of Yale. Its business is performed by them. Money paid to the college must pass into their hands, and be subject to their will....It is Yale College against Skull and Bones!! We ask all men, as a question of right, which should be allowed to live?"[27][28] The Yale Daily News first appeared on January 28, 1878. A memoir of the first college daily's birth records its first year strategy to "rag" the societies.[29]

The Class of 1884 unanimously agreed to support a new revolt against the society system by issuing a vote of no confidence to coincide with their graduation. There was a widespread understanding that the existing society system was irredeemable and likely to be abolished.

A spirited defense of the society system appeared in the May 1884 issue of The New Englander, written and published by members of Scroll and Key. Several periodicals reported regularly on the situation.[30]

Wolf's Head original tomb in 1901, Yale College

Establishment[edit]

The initial delegation, including ten Class Day officers from the Class of 1884 and led by Edwin Albert Merritt, met in secret during their senior year with the aid of members of the Class of 1883 who were "eager to start a society provided the evil features of the old societies would be eliminated. [The graduating and rising seniors] were unanimous on this point." Included among the supporters from the Class of 1883 were members touted as sure selections to Bones or Keys by the publishers of the Horoscope, an undergraduate publication that provided feature material on the most likely taps. The pro-society seniors won the Class Day vote, 67 - 50.[31]

The new society was conceived on or about June 5, 1883. Among undergraduates the fledgling group was known as the "Fox and Grapes" for the Aesopian fable of jealousy.[32]

The two older societies suffered by comparison with Wolf's Head.[33] The New Haven Register reported in 1886: "Wolf's Head is not as far out of the world, in respect to its public doings, as are [Bones and Keys]. There is a sufficient veil of secrecy drawn around its mechanism, however, to class it with the secret societies, and this gives it a stability and respectability in Yale College circles that it might not have otherwise...."[34] The society was managed similarly to finals clubs associated with the Sheffield Scientific School; however, it soon took on almost all aspects of the older societies.[7]

Early stature[edit]

The Third Society sat at the apex of a social pyramid bricked by junior societies (sophomore societies were abolished in 1875, freshman societies in 1880),[35] campus organizations, athletic teams, clubs, and fraternities.[36][37]

In 1888, the society changed its name to Wolf's Head Society, consonant with the approval among undergraduates of the society's pin, a stylized wolf's head on an inverted ankh, an Egyptian hieroglyphic known as the Egyptian Cross or "the key of life". The earliest undergraduate members allowed fellow schoolmates to handle the pin, a specific refutation of pin display by the older societies. Eternal life is symbolized rather than death or erudition. A Roman fasces had been considered as a design element for the pin.[7][38]

Point of view[edit]

Many pioneering and subsequent members mocked as "poppycock" (from the Dutch for "soft excrement")[39] the seemingly Masonic-inspired rituals and atmosphere associated with Skull and Bones. The sentiment was widespread in the Yale community particularly among undergraduates. In their The Pirates of Penzance prank, Wolf's Head members persuaded the thespian pirate king to display the numbers 322 (part of the emblem of Skull and Bones) below a skull and crossbones at a local theatre.[40] In another example, Yale President A. Whitney Griswold's deprecated the rituals as "bonesy bullshit" and "Dink Stover crap" coloring undergraduate life.[41]

Wolf's Head did maintain many traditional practices, such as the Thursday and Sunday meetings, which were common among its peers. Paul Moore, Jr., long-time Senior Fellow and successor trustee (1964 - 1990) for the Yale Corporation and long-tenured bishop in the Episcopal Church (United States), recalled the night before he first encountered combat in World War II: "I spent the evening on board ship being quizzed by [a friend from Harvard] about what went on in Wolf's Head. He could not believe I would hold back such irrelevant secrets the night before I faced possible death."[42][43]

Original Tomb[edit]

The original tomb, or hall, was erected within months of the founding. The older Academical Department societies met originally for decades in rented quarters near campus. Skull and Bones opened its tomb in 1856, more than two decades after its founding.[44] Scroll and Key did likewise; it opened its tomb in 1869 more than two decades after the society's founding.

"Old Hall" - designed by McKim, Mead and White, completed in 1884. Purchased by University in 1924.
  • The former domicile is located at 77 Prospect Street, across the street from the Grove Street Cemetery, was a Richardsonian Romanesque building commissioned for the Phelps Trust Association and designed by the architectural firm McKim, Mead and White. It was completed in 1884. It was purchased by the university in 1924, rented to Chi Psi fraternity (1924–29), Book and Bond (defunct society) (1934–35), and Vernon Hall (now Myth and Sword) (1944–54). It currently houses the Yale Institution for Social and Policy Studies.[45]

A building with narrow windows, the domicile was noted as "the most modern and handsomest" of same purpose structures by The New York Times in 1903. The building was erected in 1884 soon after the founding members secured financing.[7]

Current Tomb[edit]

The building has stone wall and wrought iron fencing, and is central to the largest secret society compound on campus. The compound commands the most prominent location on campus beyond Harkness Tower, the very icon of Yale,[47] and the Memorial Quadrangle.

Goodhue's evocative Wolf's Head Society building, shown behind its high stone enclosure.

The domicile opened in the mid-1920s and sits fronted by York Street surrounded by the Yale Daily News Briton Hadden Memorial building, and the David Geffen School of Drama at Yale University. The original School of Drama and theatre as well as the Briton Hadden Memorial Building, were gifts to Yale from Edward Harkness.[46] It is near the former homes of the Fence Club (or Psi Upsilon, 224 York Street), DKE (232 York Street) and Zeta Psi (212 York Street).

Membership[edit]

The society has been reputed to tap the gregarious "prep school type".[48][49] Past members were associated intimately with the: coeducation of Yale College,[50] establishment of the Yale residential college system and the Harvard house system,[51] founding of the Elizabethan Club,[52] and founding of the Yale Political Union.[53]

This was Yale's last all-male society. Women have been tapped since the spring of 1992.[54]

Edward John Phelps, Envoy to the Court of St. James's, accepted the offer in 1885 to be namesake to the Wolf's Head alumni association.[7] The Phelps Association, as of January 2016, holds in trust nearly seven million dollars, second among Yale societies or clubs.[55]

Yale societies contrast sharply with Harvard finals clubs on membership criteria. Contributions to undergraduate life has been historically among the criteria for membership in Yale societies. Finals clubs overlook that quality among prospective members.[56][57]

Notable members[edit]

Tom Steyer (1979), American businessman and liberal political activist
David Josiah Brewer, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
Rogers Morton (1937), US Representative, 22nd Secretary of Commerce, and 39th Secretary of the Interior
Charles Ives (1898), American modernist composer
Edward Harkness (1896), philanthropist and major benefactor to Yale
Anson Goodyear (1899), philanthropist and first president of Museum of Modern Art
Stephen Vincent Benét (1919) Pulitzer Prize–winning American poet, short story writer, and novelist

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Caro, Robert (1974). The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York. New York: Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-48076-3. OCLC 834874.
  2. ^ "Dear Wolf's Head", Blog, Yale Daily News, 02 May 2013
  3. ^ [1], article "New book ignites society debate", Britton O'Daly, Yale Daily News, 5 Oct, 2017
  4. ^ "The Choice is Yours", Blog, Yale Daily News, 24 February 2017
  5. ^ "Timeline of Selected Events in the History of Yale University". Resources on Yale History. Yale University Library. March 19, 2010. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  6. ^ Yale Alumni Publications, Inc. "March 2001 Tercentennial Edition - An Irrepressible Urge to Join". Yale Alumni Magazine. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Andrews, John. History of the Founding of Wolf's Head, Lancaster Press, 1934. Phelps Trust Association archives, Sterling Memorial Library, Yale University.
  8. ^ Bulletin of Yale University, New Haven, 15 October 1932, Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1931 - 1932, pg. 32, Henry Blodget, B.A. 1875, and pg. 44, John Proctor Clarke, B.A. 1878
  9. ^ Obituary Record of Yale University 1924 - 1925, Bulletin of Yale University, New Haven, Twenty-First Series, August 1, 1925, Number Twenty - Two, Abram Heaton Robertson, B.A. 1872, pg. 1316, Gardner Green, B.A. 1873, pg. 1319
  10. ^ John Williams Andrews (2008-04-01). "History of the founding of Wolf's Head". Open Library. OL 6318007M. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  11. ^ Richards, David Alan. Skulls and Keys, Pegasus Books, Ltd. NY, NY, 2017, pp. 284 - 327, "The Solution of Wolf's Head (1883 - 1888)" pp. 284 - 327. ISBN 978-1-68177-517-3
  12. ^ "Changes in Skull and Bones, Famous Yale Society Doubles Size of its House - Addition a Duplicate of Old Building". The New York Times. September 13, 1903. p. 22.
  13. ^ Oren, Dan. Joining the Club: A History of Jews and Yale, Second Edition. Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2000. pp. 332-333. ISBN 0-300-08468-4.
  14. ^ Nadrina Ebrahimi, Yale Daily News, "Phi Beta Kappa to induct 25 students", 7 December 2016,
  15. ^ "Welcome | Yale Phi Beta Kappa". Yale.edu. Retrieved 2016-09-04.
  16. ^ Secrets of the Tomb, pp. 36, 38.
  17. ^ Havemeyer, Loomis. "Yale's Extracurricular & Social Organizations, 1780 - 1960" (PDF). Yale Library. pp. 5, 8.
  18. ^ Robbins, Alexandra. Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths to Power. Back Bay Books, New York and Boston, pp. 61-62. ISBN 0-316-73561-2.
  19. ^ Andrews, p. 75.
  20. ^ Joining the Club. p. 22.
  21. ^ "Phi Beta Kappa - History". Clubs.psu.edu. Retrieved 2016-09-04.
  22. ^ "Tombs and Taps, An inside look at Yale's Fraternities, Sororities and Societies". Conspiracyarchive.com. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  23. ^ Stephenson, Louise L. Scholarly Means to Evangelical Ends: The New Haven Scholars and the Transformation of Higher Learning in America.The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986, p. 64; ISBN 0-8018-2695-0.
  24. ^ Secrets of the Tomb. pp. 48, 50, 127.
  25. ^ Joining the Club. p. 26.
  26. ^ Skulls and Keys, p. xix
  27. ^ Andrews, p. 39.
  28. ^ Karabel, Jerome. The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston and New York, 2005. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-618-57458-2.
  29. ^ Skulls and Keys, p. 259
  30. ^ Andrews, pp. 58-61.
  31. ^ Andrews, p. 70.
  32. ^ Skulls and Keys, p.293 and p.292
  33. ^ Skulls and Keys, p. 320
  34. ^ Secrets of the Tomb, p. 63.
  35. ^ Andrews, p. 46.
  36. ^ Caro, Robert (1974). The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York. New York: Knopf. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-394-48076-3. OCLC 834874.
  37. ^ Kabaservice, Geoffrey. The Guardians: Kingman Brewster, His Circle, and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment. Henry Holt and Company, New York, 2004. p. 45. ISBN 0-8050-6762-0.
  38. ^ Secrets of the Tomb. p. 68.
  39. ^ "Poppycock | Definition of Poppycock by Merriam-Webster". Merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2016-09-04.
  40. ^ Secrets of the Tomb, pp. 3-4, 67, 84-85.
  41. ^ The Guardians. p. 155.
  42. ^ Yale officers: Founding Trustees and their successors,[www.guides.library.yale.edu]
  43. ^ Moore, Paul. Presences: A Bishop's Life in the City. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, New York, 1997. pp. 55-56; ISBN 0-374-23711-5.
  44. ^ Yale Alumni Magazine, May/Jun 2015, "The Origins of the tomb: How Skull and Bones found a home", by David Richards
  45. ^ "Institution for Social and Policy Studies". Yale.edu. Retrieved 2016-09-04.
  46. ^ a b Kelley, Brooks Mather.Yale: A History, Yale University Press, New Haven and London. p. 374. ISBN 0-300-01636-0.
  47. ^ "Yale University Guild of Carillonneurs - Harkness Carillon and Guild Information". Yale.edu. Archived from the original on 2000-11-09. Retrieved 2016-09-04.
  48. ^ "Inside Eli, or How to Get On at Yale". Yale56.org. 1955–56. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  49. ^ Secrets of the Tomb. p. 69.
  50. ^ "The Guardians". p. 64
  51. ^ Judith Ann Schiff; Yale Alumni Publications, Inc. (May–June 2008). "How the Colleges Were Born". Yale Alumni Magazine: Old Yale. Archived from the original on 2008-05-22. Retrieved 2013-10-09.
  52. ^ "Real Shakespeare Treasures For Yale" (PDF). The New York Times, November 20, 1911.
  53. ^ The Guardians. p. 51.
  54. ^ "Yale Wolf's Head Admits Women". Deseret News, December 19, 1991.
  55. ^ Business Insider, Jan. 5, 2016, 5:01 ET, by line Abby Jackson
  56. ^ "Eleven Final Clubs: From Pig to Bat | News | the Harvard Crimson".
  57. ^ "YALE's FINEST HOURS | News | the Harvard Crimson".
  58. ^ "The Skulls and Bones Exposed". Scribd.com. 2009-02-18. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  59. ^ "Leigh Bardugo On 'Ninth House'". NPR.org. Retrieved 2019-12-04.
  60. ^ Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1957, pg. 47
  61. ^ a b "Memorabilia Yalensis". The Yale Literary Magazine. 84 (6): 269. June 1919. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  62. ^ Skulls and Keys, p. 302
  63. ^ Skull and Keys, pg. 319
  64. ^ Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1929, pg.109
  65. ^ Yale Pot Pourri and Banner yearbook, Class of 1956, pg. 43
  66. ^ The Chosen, p. 653.
  67. ^ Bulletin of Yale University, New Haven 15 October 1932, Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1931 - 1932
  68. ^ Harvard Crimson, "Yale Society Elections", published May 24, 1895.
  69. ^ "Mayor Erastus Corning: Albany Icon". Webhome.idirect.com. April 21, 1954. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  70. ^ Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1895, pg. 183
  71. ^ Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Yale Class of 1952, pg. 39
  72. ^ Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Yale Class of 1949
  73. ^ Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1954, pg. 35
  74. ^ a b c "Dem Bones, Dem Bones...and the Magic of Yale", Harvard.edu, August 30, 2004.
  75. ^ Box/folder number, Mss. A. Conger Goodyear Papers, 1683 - 1964 (bulk 1885 - 1964), Research Library, Buffalo History Museum,
  76. ^ Joining the Club, p. 182.
  77. ^ Skull and Keys, pg. 484
  78. ^ "Memorabilia Yalensis". The Yale Literary Magazine. 61 (9): 409. June 1896. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  79. ^ The Five Roles of Robert Maynard Hutchins, DePaul University Libraries, Volume 42 Issue 2, Winter 1992, DePaul Law Review, Article 9, Jeffrey O'Connell, Thomas E. O'Connell, footnote 62
  80. ^ Henderson, Clayton W. The Charles Ives Tunebook - Second Edition, Indiana University Press, Bloomington and Indianapolis, 2008. p. 367; ISBN 978-0-253-35090-9.
  81. ^ Jay (October 10, 2007). "Fire Dick Jauron!: The Continuing Story of Buffalo Dick". Firedickjauron.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2011-08-01.[dubiousdiscuss]
  82. ^ a b Skull and Keys, p. 319
  83. ^ Joining the Club, pp. 175, 409.
  84. ^ "Google". Retrieved 2016-09-04.
  85. ^ Skulls and Keys, p. 319
  86. ^ Andrews, John, The Founding of Wolf's Head Society, Lancaster Press, pg. 70
  87. ^ a b "Caltech obituary - Clark". Caltech.edu; accessed September 14, 2016.
  88. ^ Yale University Banner and Pou Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT, Class of 1924, pg. 89
  89. ^ Six Yale Societies Elect 90 Members, New York Times, May 8, 1936
  90. ^ "Yale's Great Oak Sees 'Tap Day' Again", The New York Times. May 21, 1915. p. 8.
  91. ^ Moore, Honor.The Bishop's Daughter, A Memoir, First Edition, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York, 2008. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-393-05984-7.
  92. ^ My Harvard, My Yale, editor, Diana DuBois, chapter "A Touch of Laughter", author, Rt. Rev. Paul Moore, Random House, New York, 1982, ISBN 0-394-51920-5
  93. ^ Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1937, pg. 67
  94. ^ Yale University Banner and Pot Pourri Yearbook, New Haven, CT - Class of 1929, pg. 109
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References[edit]