Scroll and Key

Scroll and Key
Scroll and Key Tomb
Founded 1842
Yale University
Type Senior Secret society
Scope Local
Chapters 1
Headquarters 484 College Street
New Haven, Connecticut 06511
United States

The Scroll and Key Society is a secret society, founded in 1842 at Yale University, in New Haven, Connecticut. It is one of the oldest Yale secret societies and reputedly the wealthiest. The society is one of the reputed "Big Three" societies at Yale, along with Skull and Bones and Wolf's Head. Each spring the society admits fifteen rising seniors to participate in its activities and carry on its traditions.

History

Scroll and Key was established by John Addison Porter, with aid from several members of the Class of 1842 (including Leonard Case Jr. and Theodore Runyon) and a member of the Class of 1843 (William L. Kingsley), after disputes over elections to Skull and Bones Society. Kingsley is the namesake of the alumni organization, the Kingsley Trust Association (KTA), incorporated years after its founding.

Members of the 1866 delegation

Lyman Hotchkiss Bagg wrote that "up until as recent a date as 1860, Keys had great difficulty in making up its crowd, rarely being able to secure the full fifteen upon the night of giving out its elections." However, the society was on the upswing: "the old order of things, however, has recently come to an end, and Keys is now in possession of a hall far superior...not only to Bones hall, but to any college-society hall in America."

In addition to financing its activities, Scroll and Key has made significant donations to Yale over the years. The John Addison Porter Prize, awarded annually since 1872, and in 1917 the endowment for the founding of the Yale University Press, which has funded the publication of The Yale Shakespeare and sponsored the Yale Younger Poets Series, are gifts from "Keys".

Traditions

Society pin
  • At the close of Thursday and Sunday sessions, members are known to sing the "Troubadour" song on the front steps of the Society's hall, a remnant of the tradition of public singing at Yale. The song (written in the 1820s by Thomas Haynes Bayly) was recorded by Tennessee Ernie Ford on his 1956 album, This Lusty Land, as "Gaily the Troubador".
  • In keeping with the practice of adopting secret letters or symbols such as Skull and Bones' "322," Manuscript's "344," and the Pundits' "T.B.I.Y.T.B," Scroll and Key is known to use the letters "C.S.P. and C.C.J."
  • Members of the society sign letters to each other "YiT", as opposed to Skull and Bones' "yours in 322".
  • Outside of its tap-related activities, the society has been known to hold two major annual events called "Z Session".

Architecture

Building, pre-expansion building (bottom)
Building during its expansion, 1901

The society's "building" was designed in the Moorish Revival style by Richard Morris Hunt and constructed in 1870. A later expansion was completed in 1901. Architectural historian Patrick Pinnell includes an in-depth discussion of Keys' building in his 1999 history of Yale's campus, relating the then-notable cost overruns associated with the Keys structure and its aesthetic significance within the campus landscape. Pinnell's history shares the fact that the land was purchased from another Yale secret society, Berzelius (at that time, a Sheffield Scientific School society). In 2002, the society underwent a major construction project rumored to involve an aquarium beneath the society.

Regarding its distinctive appearance, Pinnell noted that "19th-century artists' studios commonly had exotic orientalia lying about to suggest that the painter was sophisticated, well traveled, and in touch with mysterious powers; Hunt's Scroll and Key is one instance in which the trope got turned into a building." Later, undergraduates described the building as a "striped zebra Billiard Hall" in a supplement to a Yale yearbook. More recently, it has been described by an undergraduate publication as being "the nicest building in all of New Haven.".

Membership

Scroll and Key taps annually a delegation of fifteen, composed of men and women of the junior class, to serve the following year. Membership is offered to a diverse group of highly accomplished juniors, specifically those who have "achieved in any field, academic, extra-curricular, or personal." Delegations frequently include editors of the Yale Daily News and other publications, artists and musicians, social and political activists, athletes of distinction, entrepreneurs, and high achieving scholars.

Mark Twain is an honorary member, under the auspices of Joseph Twichell, Yale College Class of 1859.

Notable members

Dean Acheson
Fareed Zakaria
Sargent Shriver
Cole Porter
Calvin Trillin
Harvey Cushing
Garry Trudeau
Name Yale class Notability References
Leonard Case Jr. 1842 Founder of Case School of Applied Science, later Case Western Reserve University
Theodore Runyon 1842 Envoy and Ambassador to Germany; Battle of Bull Run
Carter Henry Harrison 1845 Mayor of Chicago and U.S. Representative
Homer Sprague 1852 President of the University of North Dakota
Randall L. Gibson 1853 U.S. Senator, Confederate Brigadier-General, and president of Tulane University
George Shiras Jr. 1853 U.S. Supreme Court Justice
John Dalzell 1865 U.S. Congress
George Bird Grinnell 1870 Anthropologist, historian, naturalist, and writer
Edward Salisbury Dana 1871 American mineralogist
Fred Dubois 1872 U.S. Senator
Henry deForest 1876 Southern Pacific Railroad
Gilbert Colgate 1883 President and Chairman of Colgate & Co.
George Edgar Vincent 1885 President of the University of Minnesota; President of the Rockefeller Foundation
James Gamble Rogers 1889 architect, designed many of Yale's buildings
Herbert Parsons 1890 U.S. Congress
Harvey Cushing 1891 Neurosurgeon, considered father of brain surgery
William Nelson Runyon 1892 Acting Governor of New Jersey
Frank Polk 1894 Secretary of State, Davis Polk & Wardwell, managed the conclusion to World War I
Allen Wardwell 1895 Davis Polk & Wardwell; Bank of New York; Vice-President of the American-Russian Chamber of Commerce
Lewis Sheldon 1895 Paris Peace Conference, Olympic medalist
Cornelius Vanderbilt III 1895 Brigadier General in the U.S. Army during the World War I
William Adams Delano 1895 architect; designed many of Yale's buildings
Joseph Medill McCormick 1900 U.S. Senate and publisher of the Chicago Tribune
Joseph M. Patterson 1901 Founder of the New York Daily News; manager of the Chicago Tribune
Robert R. McCormick 1903 Chicago Tribune; Kirkland & Ellis
James C. Auchincloss 1908 U.S. Congress, Governor of the NYSE., US Military Intelligence World War I
William C. Bullitt 1912 Ambassador to France, Ambassador to the Soviet Russia
Mortimer R. Proctor 1912 Governor of Vermont
Cole Porter 1913 Entertainer, songwriter
Dean Acheson 1915 51st Secretary of State
Wayne Chatfield-Taylor 1916 President, Export-Import Bank; Undersecretary of Commerce; Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
Dickinson W. Richards 1917 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Ethan A. H. Shepley 1918 Chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis
John Enders 1919 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Brewster Jennings 1920 Founder and president of the Socony Mobil Oil Company Standard Oil of New York
Seymour H. Knox 1920 American retailer, F. W. Woolworth Company
Richardson Dilworth 1921 Mayor of Philadelphia
William Hawks 1923 Film producer
James Stillman Rockefeller 1924 President and chairman, The First National City Bank of New York; Olympic gold medal
Huntington D. Sheldon 1925 Central Intelligence Agency; President of the Petroleum Corporation of America
Newbold Morris 1925 New York lawyer and politician
Benjamin Spock 1925 Pediatrician, author, and Olympic gold medalist
John Hay Whitney 1926 U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, publisher of New York Herald Tribune
Frederic A. Potts 1926 Chairman, Philadelphia National Bank; New Jersey Senate
Paul Mellon 1929 Philanthropist
Benjamin Brewster 1929 Director, Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey (later Exxon)
Raymond R. Guest 1931 U.S. Ambassador to Ireland; Special Assistant to Secretary of Defense
Donald R. McLennan 1931 Founder and chairman, insurance brokerage firm Marsh McLennan
Robert F. Wagner, Jr. 1933 Mayor of New York City
J. Peter Grace 1936 W. R. Grace & Co.
Peter H. Dominick 1937 U.S. Senator, U.S. Congressman, U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland
Sargent Shriver 1938 Peace Corps; Vice-Presidential Candidate, Presidential Medal of Freedom
Cyrus Vance 1939 Secretary of State; Secretary of the Army; Chairman, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Robert D. Orr 1940 Governor of Indiana; U.S. Ambassador to Singapore
Cord Meyer, Jr. 1943 Central Intelligence Agency; United World Federalists
George Roy Hill 1943 Academy Award for Directing The Sting
Frederick B. Dent 1944 U.S. Secretary of Commerce
John Vliet Lindsay 1944 Mayor of New York City, Congressman from New York City
Thomas Enders 1953 Ambassador to Spain, Ambassador to European Union, Ambassador to Canada
Philip B. Heymann 1954 Watergate Special Prosecutor, Deputy U.S. Attorney General; professor at Harvard Law School
Warren Zimmermann 1956 U.S. Ambassador to Yugoslavia, author
Roscoe S. Suddarth 1956 President of the Middle East Institute; U.S. Ambassador to Jordan
Calvin Trillin 1957 writer
A. Bartlett Giamatti 1960 Yale University president; National League president, MLB Commissioner
Peter Beard 1961

Photographer

Garry Trudeau 1970 Doonesbury cartoonist
Stone Phillips 1977 Dateline NBC
Rick E. Lawrence 1977 Associate Justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court
Gideon Rose 1985 Foreign Affairs
Fareed Zakaria 1986 editor of Newsweek and host of CNN show
Dave Baseggio 1989 Director of Professional Scouting for the Seattle Kraken
Dahlia Lithwick 1990 Editor at Newsweek and Slate
Jeannie Rhee 1994 Special Council member for the Obstruction of Justice Investigation
Alexandra Robbins 1998 Journalist
Ari Shapiro 2000 Co-host of All Things Considered for National Public Radio

See also