![]() ![]() Scroll & Key came along in 1842, being formed by members who were dissatisfied with Skulls & Bones. Or you can be totally lazy and go for a highly fictionalized and sensationally inaccurate route and just rent The Skulls.īy the way, in researching Skull & Bones, we called one of our good friends who works at Yale who informed us about two other lesser-known secret societies on the campus: Wolf’s Head and Scroll & Key, both of whom also have private buildings on Yale’s campus in New Haven. If you’re interested in learning more, Alexandra Robbins’ Secrets of the Tomb offers many of the secrets of Skull & Bones, allegedly provided directly by anonymous Bonesmen. Simply: It’s good to be the king - or a Bonesman. Also part of the deal seems to be all the rights and privileges that come with membership, from political favors to influential recommendations to special rewards and financial windfalls. It is a secret, after all.Īpparently, once a bonesman, always a bonesman, and the vow of silence taken at initiation about the society’s activities is a lifelong commitment. For some reason, I tend to doubt they whittle, practice the “Electric Slide,” bake cookies or help each other with their calculus homework, but hey, you never know. ![]() From various accounts, it appears that members - or Bonesmen, as they refer to themselves - meet there on Thursday and Sunday evenings during their senior years at Yale to participate in the group’s long-held rituals and traditions, plus socialize and enjoy the trappings of being tapped to be in such an exclusive club. Of course, as with any good secret society, what goes on inside its shrouded walls has been fodder for speculation. president William Howard Taft, Prescott Bush and William F. William Rusell’s little social club has steadily continued to grow, featuring among its ranks such historical figures as Walter Camp, U.S. The building itself has been officially designated a New Haven landmark. Accounts describe the interior as allegedly having a kitschy-goth vibe with plenty of skulls, skeletons and other spooky decor, plus all sorts of special rooms and chambers - we’re imagining Jekyll & Hyde, maybe with less animatronic characters. Additional wings were added to the original structure twice near the beginning of the 20th century. In 1856, the club incorporated and moved into their current location at 64 High Street where a windowless Egyptian-style building called “The Tomb” was built. Initially calling itself the Eulogian Club (in honor of the goddess of eloquence Eulogia), the group grew in stature, campus influence and wealth over the decades. government’s “secret” UFO and special aircraft testing ground that pretty much everyone on the planet knows about.Įssentially, Skull & Bones was formed in 1832 when Yale senior William Russell, upset with the rules of Phi Beta Kappa, organized a group of classmates into a new campus organization. ![]() presidents, senators and governors as well as some of the world’s powerful elite among its members.Ĭonsidering it’s a “secret society,” quite a bit seems to be known about Skull & Bones, including its history and alumni, you know, how like Area 51 is the U.S. Robbins interviewed 100 “bonesmen” for information about the secret initiation rites and the organization’s influence on world affairs.Īlexandra Robbins talked about her book, Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, The Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power, published by Little, Brown and Company.The Damned Story: Yale University boasts one of the most exclusive and enigmatic groups in the world, one that dates back approximately 175 years and features numerous U.S. Senators, CIA officials, cabinet members, and numerous heads of major international corporations. The members, known as “bonesmen,” are sworn to secrecy about the activities, power and scope of the society. Founded in the nineteenth century, the Order of Skull and Bones secretly recruits a small number of Yale juniors for membership each year. T15:00:02-04:00 Alexandra Robbins talked about her book, Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, The Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power, published by Little, Brown and Company. ![]()
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