Skull and Bones
Encyclopedia : S : SK : SKU : Skull and Bones
- For the pirate flag see Jolly Roger; for the international poison symbol see skull and crossbones; for the Cypress Hill album see Skull & Bones.
Skull and Bones is one of the secret societies based at Yale University, in New Haven, Connecticut. It is a group of 15 Yale seniors."Letter Claims Geronimo's Remains Stolen by Yale's Skull and Bones Society" by Stephen Singer, Associated Press,9 May 2006. [link]
History
The society was founded in 1832 by Phi Beta Kappa pledges William Huntington Russell and Alphonso Taft. "An Irrepressible Urge to Join," Yale Alumni Magazine, March 2001.[link] The first Skull and Bones class, or "cohort," was the very next year, 1832-33. The society was all male until 1992.
Traditionally, the Yale Daily News published the names of newly "tapped" members of all major secret societies at Yale, but this practice has been abandoned in recent times with further publicity about the organization. The society's current membership rosters and activities are not disclosed to the public. The society inducts only incoming seniors, during the late junior year prior to their graduation.
Its corporate name is the Russell Trust Association. In 1943, its trustees were exempted from filing corporate reports with the Connecticut secretary of state. In 1999 it had assets of $4,133,246. It owns Deer Island, one of the Thousand Islands in the waterway between the United States and Canada, which was given to the Order by one of its early benefactor families.#redirect
Names
Skull and Bones is known by many names, including The Order of Death, The Order, Cooperation Star, The Eulogian Club, and Lodge 322. Initiates are most commonly known as Bonesmen, Knights of Eulogia, Boodle boys, and GBdBs (Great Bones (of the) Boodle).
On an initiate's first day in Bones they are assigned a name, which they will be known as for the rest of their life. Names that are regularly used are: Magog, which is assigned to the initiate with the most experience with the opposite sex; Gog, which is assigned to the least sexually experienced; Long Devil, for the tallest; Boaz, for varsity American football captains; and Little Devil for the shortest. Bonesmen have often assumed names of mythological and legendary figures.
Bonesmen
Many people believe that the membership of Skull and Bones had been totally secret. However the membership for each year is held in the Yale University archives. The membership rosters cover the years 1833-1985, with some additional years. The top repetitive families in Skull and Bones are also known because in 1985 a disgruntled Skull and Bones member leaked rosters to a private researcher, Antony C. Sutton. This leaked 1985 data was kept privately for over 15 years, as Sutton feared that the photocopied pages could somehow identify the member who leaked it. The information was finally reformatted as an appendix in the book Fleshing out Skull and Bones by editor, researcher, and writer Kris Millegan, who published it in 2003. Bonesmen range from U.S. Presidents such as George W. Bush, George H. W. Bush, and William Howard Taft along with Supreme Court Justices, business leaders and U.S. Senators such as John F. Kerry who ran for President in 2004.
Property owned
The Skull and Bones \"Tomb\"
Beginning in 1833, one of the responsibilities of the cohort of fifteen seniors is to select fifteen new junior members to replace them, which is called being tapped for the society. For a year, Bones members meet at least weekly and conduct long self-analysis of each other and critique. This is aimed at creating a long term bond between them as they leave the university instead of during their stay at the university. Bones members are reported to be forced to reveal their innermost secrets and their "sexual biography" to one another.
According to "dissident" Bones members interviewed by Alexandra Robbins for her book Secrets of The Tomb [p. 5], members dine off a set of Hitler's silverware while in the tomb, consuming expensive gourmet meals with each other over the span of the year. Members are given new code names. The members call themselves "Knights," and simultaneously call everyone else in the world at large "barbarians". Another dissociation is that clocks in the Bones "tomb" run intentionally five minutes ahead of the rest of the world, to give the members an ongoing sense that the Bonesmen's space is a totally separate world--and a world just a bit ahead of the curve of the rest of the "barbarians" outside.
Partially, "tapping" is a response to visible or anticipated excellence, thus it could be considered meritocratic. However, since a great many members of the membership in this secret society are drawn over and over from the same families as the "core" of the group, it is a typical nested secret society with "porch brethren" on the outside making a power network for those in the inner administrative levels of the secret society. Claims have been made that when the senior delegation tapped the first class of women in the early '90s, the trustees barred all of the senior members from returning to the tomb. Because they were locked out, they humbly asked members of Manuscript Society, Yale's youngest tombed group, to use their building for meetings. Though this is usually unheard of, Manuscript allowed this for a short time, as a gesture of civility and respect.
The S&B tomb is located on Yale's campus at 64 High Street (). The property is registered under RTA Incorporated.
Trivia
- The only known chapters of Skull and Bones outside Yale were a chapter at nearby Wesleyan University in 1870, which in 1872 became an independent society under the name 'Theta Nu Epsilon', and a chapter at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, VA, the latter of which is still in existence, and is referred to as "323."
- Until recently, Bones membership was strictly all-male. In 1992, the society began admitting women, against the protests of many notable alumni.
- Skull & Bones inspired the secret society in the 2000 film The Skulls.
- A letter, sent by member Winter Mead to member F. Trubee Davison in 1918, said Geronimo's skull and other remains were taken from the leader's burial site and deposited at the Skull and Bones headquarters.[link]
- The fictional character Montgomery Burns on The Simpsons is a Bonesman from the class of 1914.
See also
Notes
References
- Millegan, Kris, ed. Fleshing Out Skull and Bones: Investigations into America's Most Powerful Secret Society. Walterville, OR: Trine Day, 2003. ISBN 0972020721
- Sutton, Antony C. America's Secret Establishment: An Introduction to the Order of Skull & Bones. Walterville, OR: Trine Day, 2003. ISBN 0972020705
- Tarpley, Webster, et al. George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography. Washington, D.C.: Executive Intelligence Review, 1992. ISBN 0943235057. Available free on the web: http://www.tarpley.net/bushb.htm
- Robbins, Alexandra. Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power. Back Bay Books, 2003. ISBN 0316735612
- ["1918 Letter Claims Geronimo's Bones Found—Yale Historian Discovers 1918 Letter Claiming to Find the Bones of Indian Leader Geronimo,"] Associated Press (AP), May 8, 2006
- ["Whose Skull and Bones?,"] Kathrin Day Lassila '81 and Mark Alden Branch '86, Yale Alumni Magazine, May/June 2006
- ["Geronimo's family calls on Bush to help return his skeleton."] The Independent, June 1, 2006.
External links
- [Audio and transcript of the April 23, 2001 ABC News television report on hidden video caught of a Skull and Bones ritual by New York Observer reporter Ron Rosenbaum]
- [Skull and Bones: an intimate look at the US Ruling Class]
- [Skull and Bones video]
- [MSNBC Video on the history of Skull and Bones]
- [John Kerry on "Meet the Press" with Tim Russert confirming Skull and Bones membership]
- [George W. Bush on "Meet the Press" with Tim Russert confirming Skull and Bones membership]
- ["Fleshing Out Skull & Bones", book by Antony C. Sutton et al.]
- [Secrets of the Tomb]
- [Skull and Bones documentary]
- [A Roster (Who's Who) of Bonesmen]
- [How the Secret Societies Got That Way] (Yale Alumni Magazine)
- [Members list]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
