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Records, 1829-1942.
University Archives UPS44.2
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- Format:
- Other
- Author/Creator:
- University of Pennsylvania. Zelosophic Society.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- University of Pennsylvania--Students.
- University of Pennsylvania.
- Ben Greet Players.
- Literature--Societies, etc.
- Literature.
- College students--Attitudes.
- College students.
- College students' writings, American--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia.
- College students' writings, American.
- College theater--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia.
- College theater.
- Student activities--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia.
- Student activities.
- Physical Description:
- 7.25 Cubic ft.
- Arrangement:
- The Zelosophic Society records are organized in seven series: Constitution and by-laws, 1829-1940; Minutes, 1829-1864, 1892-1941; Membership, 1829-1942; Subject file, 1829-1941; Scrapbooks and clippings, 1862-1940; Financial, 1920-1942; Publications, 1833-1940. The series are arranged alphabetically, except for the minutes which are arranged chronologically.
- Place of Publication:
- 1829-1942.
- Biography/History:
- The Zelosophic Society was formed in May 1829 as a response to the Philomathean Society, an exclusive literary society formed on campus in 1813. Commonly called “Zelo,” the society's purpose was to discuss literature and conduct debates (much like the charge of its counterpart group).
- Debates against their rival the Philomathean Society, began in 1847 and drew large crowds to various Philadelphia auditoriums. On the eve of the Civil War, for example, a debate on slavery took place while pistols lay atop the lectern between the debaters. In 1862, a committee of Zelo members, including J.M. Power Wallace (twice treasurer, Class of 1865) succeeded in forming a union with similar literary organizations on other college campuses, including Columbia, Brown, and Lafayette. The umbrella group, called the United States Literary League was the first co-operative group of its kind in America, but it seems to have only lasted through 1866.
- Zelo's troubles would not end there. The University's move to West Philadelphia from the Ninth and Chestnut Streets campus in 1872 would cripple the Society. West Philadelphia was then a suburb of the central residential section of the city proper and transportation was difficult in the evening in this pre-trolley, subway, and automobile era. Zelo also suffered from the competition for the student's interest which the Franklin Scientific Society, formed in 1876. There was not enough interest and students to support two literary societies and one scientific society. Membership in Zelo steadily declined and it cease to function after the 1874-1875 academic year.
- By 1876 the Zelosophic Society discontinued to exist. In the void created by Zelo's absence came the Franklin Scientific Society, which was formed in 1875 and eventually came to occupy the same rooms, to use the same library, and to conduct itself in a similar manner to the Zelosophic Society. When the last of the scientific societies, the Scientific Society of the University of Pennsylvania, began to lose steam in the early 1890s and eventually died, a group of former members of the Scientific Society decided to try to form a new public lecture and debate society. In the fall of 1892 two members of the class of 1894, Arthur Hobson Quinn and Cheesman A. Herrick, founded the Historical Society of the University of Pennsylvania. The society changed its name to the Zelosophic Society of the University of Pennsylvania in December 1892 and received an inheritance (in the form of a room in College Hall, library and archive) from the original Zelosophic Society.
- In 1893, Zelo began a campaign to promote intercollegiate debates, the first debate being held that year between Pennsylvania and Cornell University. A similar campaign was undertaken the following year to further the cause of intercollegiate oratory, and Zelo members subsequently founded the Pennsylvania State Inter-Collegiate Oratorical Association. In 1908 the Society branched out once again, this time into drama, an interest begun when Zelo offered to sponsor the Philadelphia performances of a touring English troupe called the Ben Greet Players. With the inspiration of these actors Zelo began to perform plays annually. In 1915, they produced “The Prince of Partha” the first English play published by an American-born playwright, Thomas Godfrey (a friend of Francis Hopkinson, Class of 1757). Two years later, and eighty-eight years after its inception, Zelo was officially incorporated by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
- Throughout its history the Zelosophic Society has produced two principal publications, literary magazines called The Critic and The Zelosophic Magazine. Each publication was alternately revived and became defunct throughout the history of Zelo. Notable members of Zelo included Herbert E. Ives, the inventor of the first cathode ray tube, which would eventually evolve into the modern television.
- Summary:
- The records of the Zelosophic Society of the University of Pennsylvania are a rich source for documenting the creative energies of university students for part of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- The publications of the Society, both in printed and handwritten form, cover a wide variety of topics. In the period of c.1830 to c.1870, the strongest one for this collection, one finds such literary forms as parody, humor, poetry, drama, short stories, historical sketches, and commentary on current events and culture. Though written primarily in English, there is frequent use of Latin and Greek phrases in the text, reflecting the strong classical training prevalent in nineteenth century undergraduate education. The early twentieth century writings in the collection cover much of the same forms as the nineteen century material except poetry. Additional copies of the printed publications of the Zelosophic Society can found in the general University publications collections of the University Archives.
- The dramatics subject file and scrapbooks have correspondence, newspaper clippings, playbills, and programs which provide a glimpse into the strong performance art focus of the Society in the early twentieth century, particularly its major pantomime “Masque of American Drama” which was co-produced with the Philomathean Society. Some of these files also contain photographs of some of the actors and sets used in these productions.
- The organizational structure of the Zelosophic Society and the manner in which it functioned are well documented in the minutes and constitution and by-laws which exist for most the history of the society (1829-1864, 1892-1941). A glimpse into the financial arrangement of the society during the 1930s can be found in its treasurer's account books and account statements as well as the membership fine book.
- Finding Aid/Index:
- Finding aid available from repository.
- OCLC:
- 145429265
- Online:
- Finding aid
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