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  #1  
Old 08-29-2013, 09:46 AM
badgeguy badgeguy is offline
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According to the Bairds Manuals, Phi Mu Gamma never merged with anyone. There were some local sororities, and many fraternities that closed their doors without merging with any other group. From the Bairds Manuals, and old Banta's Greek Exchanges, it seems the groups that did not merge were typically from schools where the greek system was abolished.

Interesting thread.

BG

Update: Mt. Holyoke is listed as one of those schools where the greek letter societies, most of which were founded in the 1800s, closed the system down in 1912. All the groups there did not merge with any others.

Last edited by badgeguy; 08-29-2013 at 09:48 AM.
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Old 08-29-2013, 11:38 AM
nyapbp nyapbp is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by badgeguy View Post

BG

Update: Mt. Holyoke is listed as one of those schools where the greek letter societies, most of which were founded in the 1800s, closed the system down in 1912. All the groups there did not merge with any others.
Funny you should mention MHC. I'm in the middle of writing a blog post about the groups (and linking it to some research of theirs). In the early Sorority Handbooks, Ida Shaw Martin included information about the groups at the women's colleges. There are still some groups at Wellesley that have Greek letters, although they consider themsleves literary societies more than sororities, ISM classified them as sororities.

The women's colleges are really a horse of a different color. Goucher was one of a few that had a thriving Panhellenic system, but they were forced to close when the college moved from downtown Baltimore out to Towson. (My mother-in-law was there during those years and her Alpha Phi chapter closed while she was in it).

The traditions at Mount Holyoke mirror some of the traditions in GLOs. Needing white clothing for the alumnae parade is one.
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