Inventory of
the Order of Red Friars records,
1913-1971
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Descriptive Summary
Title
Order
of Red Friars records,
1913-1971.
Creator
Duke University.
Order of Red Friars.
Extent
2 Linear Feet,
2,000 Items
(3 boxes)
Repository
University Archives, Duke
University
Abstract
Contains the records of the Order of Red
Friars, a senior men's secret honorary society, founded in
1913 at Trinity College (now Duke University). Types of
materials include minutes, a constitution, policy and
procedure statements, history statement, rituals,
correspondence, financial records, invitations,
photographs, membership and alumni lists and cards,
newspaper clippings, reports, stationery, initiation plans,
and descriptions of projects. There is one artifact, a
"Featherweight Pocket Seal" (with accompanying leather
case) which bears the Red Friars' seal. Major subjects
include secret societies, honorary societies, student life
at Duke University, male students, student government,
initiation, social activities of students, the honor code,
student participation in Duke University administration,
and student activities during World War II. Some people
associated with the Order of Red Friars include Rex Adams,
Arthur Hollis Edens, Herbert J. Herring, Furman McLarty,
Raymond Nasher, Richard M. Nixon, and William H.
Wannamaker. Materials date from 1913 to 1971.
Language
English.
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Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Patrons must sign the Acknowledgement of Legal Responsibility and Privacy Rights form before using this collection.
Collection is open for research.
Use Restrictions
Copyright for Official University records is
held by Duke University; all other copyright is retained by
the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants,
as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Order of Red Friars
records, University Archives, Duke University.
Provenance
Transfer; 1970; 70-243
Unknown source; 1975; 70-243
Unknown source; 1980; 70-243
Gift; 1985; 85-131
Unknown source; 1987; 87-12
Unknown source; 1994; 70-243
Gift; 1997; A97-74
Processing Information
Processed by Emily J. Glenn
Completed February 18, 2003
Encoded by Emily J. Glenn, March 18, 2003
This finding aid is NCEAD compliant.
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Historical Note
The Order of Red Friars was a secret men's
honorary founded in 1913 by members of the senior class at
Trinity College (now Duke University). The Red Friars'
mission was to promote social spirit at Trinity College;
later groups declared their purpose was to foster loyalty
and interest in the university through anonymous service in
student organizations. Officers consisted of Grand Friar
(President), Worthy Friar (Vice President), Grand Recorder
(of minutes), Grand Treasurer (Treasurer), Grand
Communicator (conducted correspondence), Grand Keeper of
the Gate (guarded door at meetings), and Grand Herald
(notified members of meetings).
Each year's group consisted of seven men, the
Septemvirate, chosen by the previous year's leaders, based
on their character, scholarship, qualities and potential of
leadership, and outstanding service to the university.
Tapping ceremonies were held in late spring, and grew more
elaborate over the years. In its final and most traditional
form, a red hooded figure publicly tapped new men to
membership on the steps of Duke Chapel. This ceremony, the
wearing of red carnations once a month, and the ringing of
"Charley" the Friars' bell, were the only public notices
given to the organization. All activities and projects were
kept secret. Two projects conducted completely by Friars
were the creation of the plaque of Duke University's aims
and the plans for the construction on West Campus of a Red
Friars' monastery.
Members of Red Friars held leadership positions in
Omicron Delta Kappa, Young Men's Christian Association,
Inter-Fraternity Council, the Judicial Board, Freshman
Advisory Council, Men's Student Government Association,
Associated Student Government of Duke University, class
offices, athletics, the Chanticleer, the Chronicle, the
Men's Glee Club, and fraternities. Members had been
involved in student government and social activities since
their arrival on campus, and by their senior year, became
part of this special group of leaders on campus.
Achievements of Red Friars were aimed at
improvement of student life and the development of loyalty
to the university. Because the Friars were also leaders of
student government and social life, many ideas conceived in
Friars' secret meetings later were brought to life without
the campus being aware of their origins. Other schemes not
conceived of by Friars were successful because of the
motivation of support by Friars in their various positions
of campus leadership. Examples of both are the Wartime
Student Activities Board, Joe College Weekends,
reorganization of fraternity and rush rules, agitation for
change in the housing system, course and professor
evaluations, elimination of Duke and Duchess, improvement
of student-faculty relationships, and pep rally planning.
The Friars were very important to the President
and Deans of the university both as a means of discovering
and influencing student opinion; they were often were privy
to information that was not widely known on campus. These
relationships were reinforced by the fact that many
faculty, administrators, and Board of Trustees members were
Friars or had been given an honorary membership. The Friars
had up to three honorary members at any given time,
composed of upper level administration and faculty members.
Honorary members included William Preston Few, William H.
Wannamaker, Robert L. Flowers, James Cannon, George Allen,
Herbert Herring, James Truesdale, Coach Wallace Wade,
Everett Weatherspoon, Alan Manchester, Furman McLarty, Ted
Minah, Arthur Hollis Edens, William Griffith, Thomas
Southgate, Marshall Pickens, and Raymond Nasher. The Friars
held meetings with members of the faculty and
administration to discuss campus situations and plans for
action. Opinions of both university and student leaders on
issues such as wartime regulations, integration, drinking
rules, fraternity regulation, housing problems, and the
honor system are contained within these discussions.
The Friars suspended its activities during World
War II due to constant fluctuation in the student body that
made it difficult to choose students who would be in
attendance for a full school year. Friars' activities were
suspended at the close of the 1942-1943 school year and an
alumni committee formed to reestablish the order post-war.
The Friars were restored with the graduating class of 1949.
Red Friars voluntarily disbanded in 1971, after
failing to tap new members in 1970. Throughout the 1960s,
the order increasingly faced charges of elitism and had
difficulty selecting members who would accept membership.
In 1971, after a meeting of Friar alumni, the order was
discontinued as it was considered to have outlived its
usefulness for the university and the student body.
Although the order has never been reestablished at
Duke University, Order of Red Friars alumni continue to
provide exceptional leadership and support of Duke
University endeavors.
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Collection Overview
Contains the records of the Order of Red Friars, a
senior men's secret honorary society at Duke University,
founded in 1913. Constitutions, policies, correspondence,
tapping ceremony materials, and minutes outline the
influential activities of the Red Friars from about
1913-1971. Materials are ordered by subject; some gaps
occur between 1943 and 1948 due to World War II. An index
of members is also included.
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Subject Headings
These and related materials may be accessed under
the following subject headings in the Duke University
Libraries online catalog.
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Adams, Rex,
1927-
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Duke University.
Order of Red Friars.
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Duke University--Administration.
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Duke University--Faculty.
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Duke University--Presidents.
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Duke University--Societies, etc.
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Duke University--Student housing.
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Duke University--Students--Social life and customs.
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Duke University--Students--Societies and clubs--Honor
societies.
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Duke University--Students--Societies, etc.
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Edens, Arthur
Hollis, 1901-1968.
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Few, William
Preston, 1867-1940.
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Initiations (into
trades, societies, etc.)
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Nasher,
Raymond.
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Nixon, Richard M.
(Richard Milhous), 1913-
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Secret societies--Rituals.
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Secret societies--North Carolina--Durham.
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Student
participation in administration.
-
Wannamaker,
William H.
-
World War,
1939-1945--Education and the war.
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Related Material
Duke University. Office of the
President records.
University Archives, Duke
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Order of the White Duchy
records.
University Archives, Duke
University.
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Detailed Description of the Collection
Container List
Box 1
Folder 1
Correspondence,
1942-1943,
1949,
1956,
1964,
1967,
1969-1971, undated
Folder 2
Correspondence Related to Initiation
Banquets,
1952-1958
Folder 3
Correspondence Related to Initiation
Banquets,
1959-1965
Folder 4
Correspondence Related to Initiation
Banquets,
1966-1970, undated
Folder 5
Financial Records,
1938-1943,
1949-1958,
1962-1964
Folder 6
Financial Records,
1939-1943,
1949-1953,
1959,
1965-1969
Folder 7
History of "Charley" the Red Friars
Bell,
1927,
1951,
1953
Folder 8
Instructions to New Septemvirate,
1959,
1969, undated
Folder 9
Membership Lists,
1913-1943,
1949-1956,
1958
Folder 10
Membership Lists,
1913,
1915-1943,
1949-1950,
1968, undated
Folder 11
Minutes,
1965,
1969, undated
Folder 12
Newspaper Clippings
1913,
1953-1955,
1959,
1960,
1970-1971
Folder 13
Notes from Initiation Banquet,
Spring
1961
Folder 14
Opening Ceremony for Meetings, undated
Folder 15
Photographs, Tapping Ceremony,
1953
Folder 16
Program for Red Friars Ladies'
Night,
May 20,
1925
Folder 17
Project, Red Friar Monastery,
1936-1937, undated,
photographs
Folder 18
Project, Plaque of the Aims of Duke
University,
1942
Folder 19
Project, Bus Boycott,
1949-1950
Folder 20
Project, House System,
1959,
1967
Folder 21
Project, "Student's Guide to the
Duke Faculty,"
1964
Folder 22
Project, "Report of the University
Center Committee to the Educational Facilities Committee,"
1964-1966
Folder 23
Project, Proposed Shield, undated
Folder 24
Reference materials and notes,
Minutes of Duke University Religious Council,
April 23, 1959
Folder 25
Reference materials and notes,
"Constitution of the Men's Interfraternity Council," April
1960
Folder 26
Reference materials and notes
Men's Student Government Association
Dormitory Evaluation Commission, "Alternative Living
Arrangements Available to Sophomores,"
January 5, 1963
Folder 27
Reference materials and notes, "Your
Student Government,"
1964-1965
Folder 28
Reference, Wall Street Journal
clipping,
November 11,
1968
Folder 29
Stationery, undated
Folder 30
Tapping and Initiation Ceremonies,
1916,
1966,
1967,
1970, undated
Folder 31
"Featherweight Pocket Seal" and
leather case, undated
Box 2
Folder 32
Constitution and Minutes, Volume
One,
1913-1931,
1933-1934
Folder 33
Minutes, Volume Two,
1935-1943,
1949-1950
Folder 34
Minutes, Volume Three,
1951-1954
Folder 35
Minutes, Volume Four,
1955-1960
Box 3
Folder 36
Membership cards,
1913-1943,
1949-1968