The Delphic Club | |
Location | 9 Linden Street Cambridge, MA |
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Coordinates | 42°22′20.6″N 71°07′03.1″W / 42.372389°N 71.117528°W |
Built | 1903 |
Architect | James Purdon H'1895 |
Architectural style | neo-Georgian style |
Part of | Harvard Square Historic District (ID86003654) |
The Delphic Club is an all-male social group at Harvard University founded in 1846.
History
The club was founded in 1846 as an all-male chapter of the Delta Phi fraternity, known as the "Alpha of Massachusetts." Twenty members were elected during the Chapter's two years of life. Then faculty forced it to disband. In 1885, the Grand Council of the Delta Phi fraternity decided to re-establish a fraternity at Harvard known as the Zeta Chapter, which evolved into the current club. The membership voted to become a Final Club in 1900 and in 1902 severed ties with the national fraternity to which it had maintained only loose ties. A famous, possibly apocryphal, story has it that J.P. Morgan, Jr., class of 1889, joined The Gas when he didn't get into his club of choice. According to The Harvard Crimson, he then financed the creation of his own club, the Delphic, from the fraternity.[1]
The club was initially located at 52 and 59 Brattle St. before moving to 72 Mt. Auburn St. where it was housed from 1887 to 1903. In the 1890s it "was officially called the Delta Phi, or more familiarly "The Gashouse", because all its windows would be lighted at once by the electricity that was then a novelty; so that it was called "The Gashouse" because of the absence of gas."[2] The current home of the club is at 9 Linden St., steps from Harvard Yard and a few blocks from Harvard Square. It was designed by James Purdon H'1895 in the neo-Georgian style and occupied in 1902-03. The design features the red brick and cornices typical of Harvard Yard. The interior contains numerous large common spaces and an oversize formal dining room on the 2nd floor for large events, no living quarters, and a regulation squash court.[3] In the basement is a panelled living room for entertaining visitors. In August 2017, the Bee Club moved into the house at 9 Linden St. as well.[4]
The Delphic is officially recognized by Harvard University. However, it was not officially affiliated with the university or recognized between 1984 and 2018. Ties with Harvard were severed in 1984 as a consequence of the Title IX provision of the U.S. Education Amendments of 1972, which would have required the club to admit female members.[5] In September 2018, Harvard announced that it would recognize the Delphic-Bee Merged Group as a gender-inclusive club, thereby exempting the club from the college's sanctions on members of single-gender social organizations.[6] The Delphic is governed by a Trust with a Board of Directors composed of alumni.
Merger with The Bee
In August 2017 the Delphic and the all-female Bee Club agreed to share premises as a precursor to an eventual merger.[7] In September 2018, Harvard College announced that it would recognize the Delphic-Bee Merged Group as a single gender-inclusive social organization. As a result, members of the Delphic & Bee are not subject to the College's sanctions policy.[6] The Bee Club was Harvard's oldest all-female final club, founded in 1991.[8] Subsequently, the two clubs reached an agreement to separate in September 2020.
Name
The Gashouse was the first name chosen by the founders: Ward Thoron, Herbert Lyman and Boylston Beal in 1885 the club name was chosen the Gashouse because of the absence of gas.The club was founded as the Zeta Chapter of the Delta Phi fraternity. With the opening of the new clubhouse in 1903, after the break from Delta Phi, the undergraduates began calling the club "The Gas," after the club's nickname. This was adopted as the official name in 1908 but soon thereafter was changed to "The Delphic Club", presumably after cooler heads prevailed. The name of the club is a portmanteau of "Delta Phi Club".
Insignia and emblems
The club's emblem is three torches on a blue field. The slogan for the club is "Three times three, long life to thee." The club's traditions include formal, black tie dinners with alumni and undergraduates and a ban on non-members in the club. The club recruits members through a series of invited dinners and formal dances in a process known as "Punching".
Notable Members
- Matt Damon, American actor, screenwriter and film producer.
- Jack Lemmon, American actor.
- J. P. Morgan Jr., American banker, finance executive, and philanthropist.
- Aga Khan IV, 49th and current Imam of Nizari Ismailism.
- Michel de Carvalho, British financier, former Olympic skier and luger, and former child actor in films such as The Brave One, The Tin Star, and Lawrence of Arabia.
- George Santayana, Spanish-American philosopher, essayist, poet, and novelist
- Julian Codman, American lawyer who was a vigorous opponent of Prohibition and was also involved with the Anti-Imperialist League.
- William Cameron Forbes, American banker, served as governor-general of the Philippines from 1909 to 1913 and ambassador of the United States to Japan from 1930 to 1932.
- Raymond Emerson, American civil engineer, investment banker, grandson of Ralph Waldo Emerson, and faculty at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.
- Archibald Cox, U.S. Solicitor General under President John F. Kennedy and a special prosecutor during the Watergate scandal.
- Bill Weld, 68th Governor of Massachusetts.
- Frank L. McNamara Jr., United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts from 1987 to 1989.
- Richard E. Byrd III, United States naval officer, Antarctic explorer, and the son of Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd.
- Adlai Stevenson III, American attorney and politician of the Democratic Party who represented Illinois in the United States Senate from 1970 until 1981.
- Dick Button, Two-time Olympic figure skating champion (1948, 1952) and five-time consecutive World champion (1948–1952).
- Nicholas Abruzzese, American professional Ice Hockey Center for the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Renovations
The clubhouse was renovated in 1974-75, which included the walls, interiors and roofs to deal with leaks and general conditions. A more comprehensive renovation was undertaken in 2013-14, it included updating the club's plumbing and electrical systems and also revealed pooled water beneath the club's floor and back yard occasioned by the destruction of the club's drainage system during the construction of Farkas Hall (aka the Hasty Pudding Clubhouse). This has resulted in litigation between the Delphic Club and Harvard University. During renovations of the 2.5 floor, Ronny Yero found paintings dating from the 12th century.[9]
In literature
Stories of The Gas House are recounted by several authors including Delphic alum Charles Macomb Flandrau who tells many stories in his celebrated book Harvard Episodes[10] and also in Diary of A Freshman (1901).[11] In Harvard Episodes Flandrau (writing in 1897) depicts the multi-generational aspects of the club in describing an old graduate, "If they didn't actually know him, they knew of him. Even this crust is sweet to the returned graduate whose age is just far enough removed from either end of life's measure to make it intrinsically unimportant."[10]: 258 George de la Ruiz Santayana (1886) was made an honorary member in 1890 and spent a great deal of time at the Delphic as recounted in Joel Porte's (Ph.D.'62) book, Santayana at the 'Gas (1964). Santayana included the club in several works, including "The Judgement of Paris, or, How the First-ten Man Chooses a Club," which concludes with:
Whatever follows: nor, until he die
Will Paris grieve he chose the Delta Phi[12]
At the opening of the new clubhouse in 1903, Santayana wrote a dedicatory poem that ends:
And though we go, for change is Nature's plan,
To loves and labours that approve the man,
Half the soul clutches what the world can give,And half remains where youth and friendship live.[13]
Footnotes
- ↑ "The Men's Final Clubs" James K. McCauley The Harvard Crimson October 5, 2010
- ↑ George Santayana, Persons and Places, Fragments of Autobiography, ed. William G. Holzberger, et al, (Cambridge, MIT Press, 1986)
- ↑ 1925 Delphic Blue Blook, Reminiscences of Haven Parker '22
- ↑ "Bee and Delphic to Share Membership, Clubhouse | News | the Harvard Crimson".
- ↑ "Clubs at Harvard Vote to End Ties" The New York Times; December 11, 1984
- 1 2 "Fox, Delphic-Bee Clubs Among 15 Social Groups to Promise Co-Ed Status, Escaping Sanctions | News | the Harvard Crimson".
- ↑ "Bee and Delphic to Share membership, Clubhouse" by Hannah Natanson, The Harvard Crimson; August 30, 2017
- ↑ "From a Queen to a Colony: The Bee Club was Born | News | the Harvard Crimson".
- ↑ "Delphic Trust Files Lawsuit Against Harvard Administration" by Antonio Coppola and John P. Finnegan, The Harvard Crimson; October 28, 2013
- 1 2 Harvard Episodes by Charles Macomb Flandrau orig. published 1897, reprinted Westphalia Press 2014
- ↑ Diary of A Freshman by Charles Macomb Flandrau, orig. published 1901, reprinted Kessinger Publishing 2010
- ↑ William Hltzberger, "The Unpublished Poems of Santayana," The Southern Review Winter 1975 pp148-150
- ↑ George de la Ruiz Santayana, November 20, 1903; reprinted: Delphic Club 75th Anniversary Booklet April 1979