Order of skull and bones9/14/2023 Scroll and Key was founded 10 years later, in 1842, and is second to “Bones” in prestige in some years, the “better men” will choose Keys over Bones, as apparently happened in Harvey Cushing's class. Skull and Bones, founded in 1832, is the oldest and the most important. There are six “above-ground” secret societies. They are privately owned and are not the property of Yale University. The secret societies are institutions unique to Yale and are found in no other academic institution either here or abroad. In doing so, she experienced harassment and not-so-subtle threats she related a telephone call from an irate Bonesman who berated her for her work and warned her that “there are a lot of us in journalism and political institutions across the country-good luck with your career.” She has published a book entitled Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, The Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power. A recent Yale alumna and journalist, Alexandra Robbins, has succeeded in persuading over a hundred Bonesmen to break their vow of silence and speak to her about the society. What are the secret societies at Yale? What do they do? Who belongs to them, and how do they exercise their power? There has been a recent surge of interest in Skull and Bones in particular because both Presidents Bush have been members. There is ample evidence that Gilman, in particular, was a power to be reckoned with in the inner sanctum of Skull and Bones. It might be useful to pay some attention to this unnoticed “elephant in the living room,” not because I can shed any light on this subject, as I am not privy to their secrets either, but because it says a lot about power and old-boy networks as practiced in the 19th century and indeed up to our own day. The biographers of Welch, Halsted, and Cushing pay lip service to the secret societies but quickly rush off to other subjects. Alan Chesney, in his monumental history of the early days at Hopkins, didn't mention it either. The two leading biographers of Gilman, Fabian Franklin and Abraham Flexner, did not mention Skull and Bones in their text or list it in the index. The interested reader will search in vain for any mention of these organizations or their influence because they are, indeed, secret. Halsted, despite being football captain and a talented player on the baseball team, was not tapped by either one. Both Gilman and Welch belonged to Skull and Bones, while Harvey Cushing was a member of Scroll and Key and may have turned down a tap from Bones. Running like a golden thread through this story are Yale's secret societies, dominated by the famous Skull and Bones. In the second half of the 19th century, Yale College produced four men who were to play pivotal roles in creating a new and distinctly American kind of university and in the way medicine was taught in this country: One Harvard alumnus was quoted as saying that he intended to send his son to Yale because, “in real life, all the Harvard men are working for Yale men.” Yale men made such records that … to rival institutions and academic reformers there was something irritating and disquieting about old Yale College. Yale inspired a loyalty in its sons that was conspicuous and impressive. Yale was exasperately and mysteriously successful, and the power of the place remains unmistakable. The official history of the college puts it this way: It is worth noting that every name I have mentioned, including the fictitious ones, were members of Yale's famous secret society, Skull and Bones, except for those few who matriculated before Bones was founded in 1832. Yale's reputation was such that it even spawned fictitious Yalies such as Frank Merriwell and Dink Stover. White, founding president of Cornell and a future president of the United States, William Howard Taft. Willard Gibbs educators such as Timothy Dwight, future Yale president, and Andrew D. Calhoun scientists such as Benjamin Silliman and J. Morse men of letters such as Noah Webster statesmen such as John C. Numbered among Yale's graduates were inventors such as Eli Whitney and Samuel F. Having celebrated its centennial in the first year of the new century, the college was transforming itself from a regional New England school whose main function was the education of young men for the Congregational ministry to a dynamic national school whose new function was to train the leaders of the expanding, dynamic America that sprung into being in that century. During the 19th century, Yale College was an academic powerhouse.
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