Jefferson Literary and Debating Society

The Jefferson Literary and Debating Society
The Hall

Haec Olim Meminisse Iuvabit

Founded 1825
School University of Virginia
Home Page http://www.jeffersonsociety.org

Officers of the Society, Fall 2015

President Ms. Kathryn Kingsbury
Vice President Ms. Elizabeth Master
Room Seven Resident Ms. Kate Travis
Secretary Ms. Melissa Murphy
Treasurer Mr. Patrick MacDonnell
Historian Mr. Grong Wang
Keeper Mr. Kyle Bruse

The Jefferson Literary and Debating Society is a debating and literary society at the University of Virginia. Founded in 1825, it is the oldest organization at The University and one of the oldest continuously existing debating societies in North America.[1]

The Society meets on Friday evenings, mainly in Hotel C of the University's West Range, known colloquially as "Jefferson Hall", "Jeff Hall", or simply the "Hall". In former times it was popularly known around Grounds as the "Jeff."[2]

The Greek letters of the Hall are Φ Π Θ - Phi Pi Theta - which are the initials of the Society's Greek motto: φίλοι, πατρίς, θεός (philoi, patris, theos, or "friends, fatherland, God"). After Phi Beta Kappa, the Jefferson Society is the second oldest continually existing Greek-lettered organization in the country. The Hall's Latin motto, taken from Book 1, line 203 of Virgil's Aeneid, is Haec olim meminisse iuvabit - roughly translated, "In the future it will be pleasing to remember these things."

Events

The Society's main event is the Speaker Series, which invites individuals from various areas to address the Society and its guests each Friday evening during the fall and spring academic sessions.

The Society hosts several formal events annually, including Wilson's Day, the Restoration Ball, and Founder's Day, first held in 1832.

History

The Jefferson Society was founded on July 14, 1825, by sixteen members of the now-defunct Patrick Henry Society in Room Seven, West Lawn.[3]

The Lawn during early Fall.

Membership in the Society grew rapidly in the early years after its founding, and it finally secured a permanent meeting place in Hotel C (originally designed as a dining hall) on the West range. Hotel C is known as "Jefferson Hall".

By 1855, the University of Virginia was the second largest University in the nation after Harvard University, enrolling 645 students. That school year, the Society admitted 155 new members: nearly a quarter of the student body of the University.

Society Members on the Lawn

In the hotheaded antebellum years, the Society could become raucous. Its elections were condemned by the Faculty for "such turbulence as to degrade the reputation of the University."[4] An especially coveted honor was to be selected as "final orator," a post apparently comparable to that of a valedictorian today.

The Society played a key role in establishing student journalism at the University, founding the University Magazine as early as 1856.[5] Later known as the Virginia Spectator, the paper played a major part in University life for a century, with its profile ranging from high seriousness to satire, until being shut down by the president of the University in the late 1950s for obscenity.[6] The Jefferson Society sponsored the magazine for many decades.[7]

Historical possessions

Famous members

Honorary members

Thomas Jefferson turned down an invitation for honorary membership in an August 12, 1825 letter, citing his need to avoid altering his relationship with the University and its students.[13]

Notes and references

  1. University of Virginia - Learn Our Traditions and Lingo
  2. Dabney, p. 110, writing in the context of the Society's 1925 centennial
  3. Patton, 235.
  4. Dabney, p. 12
  5. More, John, "History of the Jefferson Society, 1825-1957," noting that the magazine was first mentioned in the Society's minutes in 1865
  6. Dabney, pp. 552, 606
  7. Dabney, p. 181
  8. Harrison, James Albert (1903). The life of Edgar Allan Poe. pp. 60–61.
  9. Kraig, Robert Alexander (2004). Woodrow Wilson and the Lost World of the Oratorical Statesman. p. 42.
  10. "Virginia is for Lovers: Romance at the University". UVA Magazine. Retrieved 2014-10-06.
  11. "UVa President John Casteen Discusses School History with Students". Newsplex.com. 2010-02-01. Retrieved 2014-10-06.
  12. Gunay, Dafne (2004-10-20). "Cavalier Royalty". The Cavalier Daily. Retrieved 2006-11-09. I played varsity volleyball, I was in the Jefferson Society, A Chi O sorority, U.Dems and I was also an honor advisor.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 "HNAI Long Beach Hard Times Tokens Auction Catalog". 2007. p. 95.
  14. 14.0 14.1 "Jefferson Society Famous Members (Revised)" (PDF). University of Virginia Board of Visitors. 2013-11-14.

Related

External links