The Clariosophic Society, also known as ΜΣΦ (Mu Sigma Phi), is a literary society founded in 1806 at the University of South Carolina, then known as South Carolina College, as a result of the splitting in two of the Philomathic Society, which had been formed within weeks of the opening of the college in 1805 and included virtually all students. At what was called the Synapian Convention held in February 1806, the members of Philomathic voted to split into two separate societies, one of which became known as Clariosophic, while the other society became known as Euphradian. Two blood brothers picked the members for the new groups in a manner similar to choosing sides for an impromptu baseball game. John Goodwin became the first president of Clariosophic. Other early presidents include Stephen Elliott, Hugh S. Legaré. George McDuffie and Richard I. Manning.[1] The Society was reactivated in 2013.
Clariosophic Society | |
---|---|
ΜΣΦ | |
Founded | February 1806 University of South Carolina |
Type | Literary society |
Affiliation | Independent |
Status | Active |
Scope | Local |
Chapters | 1 |
Headquarters | Columbia, South Carolina United States |
Symbols
editApplicants who had fulfilled all the requirements for membership were given the society's Latin Diploma along with its key to signify their membership. Somewhere along the way, the giving of keys ceased but the key still appeared on the diplomas. The key was shaped like a rhombus or lozenge except that the sides did not meet at the top and bottom, but were blunted off. The front had two overlapping hearts at the top with the Greek letters, Mu Sigma Phi (ΜΣΦ) in the center and the initials C.S., for Clariosophic Society, at the bottom. The reverse side had the two hearts at the top and two Greek words beginning with the letters, Delta and Phi (ΔΦ) in the center and the initials S.C.C, for South Carolina College, at the bottom.
Notable members
edit19th Century
editNotable members of the 19th Century include:[2]
- Preston Brooks, later U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- Andrew Pickens Butler, later U.S. senator from SC
- William Butler, later physician and U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- Patrick C. Caldwell, later U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- James Calhoun, later president of the Georgia Senate and mayor of Atlanta, Georgia
- John C. Calhoun US Vice President (Honorary member)
- William Capers, later pastor of Columbia's Washington Street Church and a bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South
- William K. Clowney, later U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- Mark Anthony Cooper, later U.S. Representative from Georgia
- Anderson Crenshaw, the first graduate of the South Carolina College, now the University of South Carolina, and later Alabama Supreme Court justice.
- James Dellet, later U.S. Representative from Alabama
- Stephen Elliott, later First Episcopal Bishop of Georgia & Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the CSA
- John Gayle, Clariosophic president, later governor of Alabama
- Robert Budd Gilchrist, U.S. federal judge in SC
- William Henry Gist, later governor of SC
- Wade Hampton III, later governor of SC and U.S. senator from SC
- Hopkins Holsey, later U.S. Representative from Georgia
- Hugh S. Legaré, later US Attorney General
- Dixon Hall Lewis, later U.S. Senator from Alabama
- Charles James McDonald, later governor of Georgia and Georgia supreme court justice
- George McDuffie, later SC Governor and U.S. Senator from SC
- Basil Manly, later Baptist minister and president of the University of Alabama
- Richard I. Manning, later SC Governor and U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- John Murphy, later governor of Alabama
- John Belton O'Neall (1793–1863), South Carolina State Representative 1816–1828, Judge of the South Carolina Court of Appeals 1830, and member of the U.S. O'Neall political family
- Eugenius Aristides Nisbet, later U.S. Representative from Georgia and Georgia Supreme Court justice
- William T. Nuckolls, later U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- Francis Wilkinson Pickens, later U.S. Representative from South Carolina, U.S. ambassador to Russia and Governor of South Carolina
- Henry L. Pinckney, later U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- Henry William Ravenel, Botanist[3]
- James Rogers, later U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- Benjamin Glover Shields, later U.S. Representative from Alabama and United States Chargé d'Affaires in Venezuela
- Edwin G. Seibels, while a student served in the SC House; later became an insurance executive and invented the vertical filing cabinet.[4]
- Waddy Thompson, Jr., later U.S. Representative from South Carolina
- Louis T. Wigfall, US Senator from Texas and Confederate Senator from Texas
20th Century
edit- William Jennings Bryan Dorn, U.S. Representative from South Carolina [5]
- Walton James McLeod, III, Member of SC Legislature
References
edit- ^ Hollis, Daniel Walker (1951). University of South Carolina, volume I: South Carolina College. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, pp.230-233.
- ^ South Carolina College: Clariosophic Society, Catalogue of Members in 1842, Lanham Digital Library of Hill Country History at Logan Library at Schreiner University Archived 2010-07-11 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Haygood, Tamara Miner (2006). Henry William Ravenel, 1814–1887 South Carolina scientist in the Civil War Era, Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press
- ^ Seibels family papers, 1780–1960 at University of South Carolina - South Caroliniana Library
- ^ "Page 85".
Resources
edit- Haygood, Tamara Miner (2006). Henry William Ravenel, 1814–1887 South Carolina scientist in the Civil War Era, Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.
- Hollis, Daniel Walker (1951). University of South Carolina, volume I: South Carolina College, Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.