Order of the Bull's Blood
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Order of the Bull's Blood (also known as Lodge 443) is a secret society at Rutgers University, established in 1834 by Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, William A. Newell, John Parker and Cortlandt Parker and Joseph P. Bradley. It is said to be the oldest currently active secret society at Rutgers, dating several years before the incarnation of the first fraternities at the University. In the Spring of each year, twelve members of the junior class are chosen, or "tapped," by the outgoing members from the senior class of the Order and are tied to a series of continuing pranks at Rutgers and at historic rival Princeton University, including allegedly being involved in the 1875 theft of a cannon at Princeton—an event (and the ensuing debate between the two university presidents) reported in nationwide newspapers—and an unsuccessful repeat attempt in 1946.
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[edit] History
[edit] Notable members
- Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, Class of 1836, U.S. Secretary of State, United States Senator
- William A. Newell, Class of 1836, Physician, Governor of New Jersey
- Joseph P. Bradley, Class of 1836, Associate Justice of Supreme Court
- Cortlandt Parker, Class of 1836, lawyer, first President of the American Bar Association, son of University benefactor and congressman James Parker,
- Garret A. Hobart, Class of 1863, Vice President of the United States
- James Neilson, Class of 1866, University benefactor
- Howard N. Fullerton, Class of 1874, wrote Rutgers' alma mater "On the Banks of the Old Raritan"
- Leonor F. Loree, Class of 1877, President of the Pennsylvania Railroad
- William H. S. Demarest, Class of 1883, President of Rutgers University
- Philip Milledoler Brett, Class of 1892, President of Rutgers University, Successful Corporate Attorney
- Carl Woodward, Class of 1914, President of University of Rhode Island
- Clifford P. Case, Class of 1925, United States Senator
- Oswald "Ozzie" Nelson, Class of 1927, Musician, Actor (Ozzie and Harriet)
- Samuel Blackman, Class of 1927, Journalist
- Milton Friedman, Class of 1932, Economist, Public Intellectual and Nobel Laureate
- Martin Agronsky, Class of 1936, Journalist
- William Hughes, Class of 1955, Congressman, Ambassador to Panama
- David Stern, Class of 1963, NBA Commissioner
- Louis Freeh, Class of 1971, former Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation
- Robert Torricelli, Class of 1974, United States Senator
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- What Makes an Honorable Society? Compares Bull's Blood to Cap and Skull on page 16.
- Degenerate Society A Rutgers Journalist reflects on his being tapped into the Bull's Blood.