
UConn's Secret Society
For 31 years The Druids influenced campus life
Secret societies and fraternal
organizations have existed from the days of ancient Egypt and the Greek and
Roman Empires. Some are well known while others, such as UConn’s Druids, are
not.
The Druids were a secret society for 31 years, so secret that
virtually no
documentation tracing its activities
survives except for annual entries in the Nutmeg yearbook.
All records reportedly disappeared in 1952 shortly after the Student
Senate, which appeared to take direction from the Druids, banned the group.
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| The 1928-29 Druids pictured here from
a page in the annual Nutmeg yearbook. For a larger view,
click on the photo. |
From the yearbook entries, however, the power and influence of
the Druids, usually a half-dozen members each
year, is staggering. Nothing relating to student governance, it seems, was
outside their purview.
“Their potent leadership controls and decides the progress
and direction of all student activities of any importance,” says the 1940 Nutmeg.That was also
the year that the group’s all-male barrier was broken, with the selection
of Elizabeth Rourke ’40 (CLAS), editor-in-chief of the yearbook. Membership
was usually limited to six men, although it went as high as nine in 1928.
“They were the classic secret men’s society,” says
Daniel Blume ’53 (CLAS), and a member of the Archons, the
honors group that replaced the Druids in 1952. “They were self-perpetuating,
choosing their successors from campus leaders, like the president of the student
government, editors of the Campus (the student
newspaper), and guys in
the fraternity system.”
The existence of the group was announced in a May 22, 1920, Connecticut
Campus article, with the headline “Rumor of a Senior Secret Society at C.A.C.” (UConn
was Connecticut Agricultural College from 1899 to 1933), noted “new members
will be ‘tapped’ today.” How the “tapping” worked
is unknown, but those selected were approached each year at the Junior Prom.
Things began to fall apart for the Druids in October 1951, a time
when college fraternities nationally were
fighting over
discriminatory membership
policies. On Feb.
6, 1952, the Campus reported that “the Student Senate . . . acted to force
the Druids into the open.” The Campus article also includes this tantalizing
tidbit: “The senators offered microfilm recordings of all Druid minutes and
records since the organization’s founding in 1921.” Soon after, the
records were gone.
During the course of the Feb. 6 Senate meeting, the Senate president,
Peter Brodigan ’52 (CLAS), revealed himself as a member of the Druids, as did
Senate member Paul Veillette ’52 (CLAS), secretary of the secret group and
one of the three senators working to expose it.
Over the next week, all the
Druids revealed themselves, breaking the three-decade tradition of secrecy. With
their organization in shambles,
the former Druids created a new men’s honor society, the Archons, on March
25, 1952, as an open men’s honorary society with almost an identical
membership. The Archons, lacking
the power and influence of their
predecessors, was much more in
keeping with an honorary society,
and it lasted until 1970.
Over the 31 years that the Druids existed, 159 students were tapped
as members. With two exceptions, Rourke, in 1940, and Satashi Oishi ’49 (ENG),
a Japanese-American student, in 1949 all were white males. Druids were selected from
the ranks of student
leaders, so it is possible that as the diversity of the student body slowly
changed, it would have been more
likely that membership in the Druids would have reflected that change.
But we will never know.
-- Mark J. Roy '74 (CLAS)
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