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Palladia Secret Society was founded in the early 1960s as the highest honor a woman can attain at the University of Georgia. Palladia inducts approximately twelve women each fall and has an extensive network of alumni, including administrators at the University of Georgia and prominent female leaders across the state.
The Mystical 7 was also the first society to initiate women as members. In 1833, the Skull and Bones Society was organized at Yale University among members of the senior class as a burlesque of Phi Beta Kappa. This spawned other similar secret societies that differentiate themselves from Greek-lettered societies.
Secret societies in the United States (including those founded in the United States that later spread to other countries, and those founded/inspired elsewhere that came to the United States). Subcategories
The LSV was formed in 1906 as a secret society for women students at the University of Missouri. [1] [2] It was revealed to the campus in February 1908.Speculation immediately began that it was the female sister-chapter to QEBH, an honor society for male students.
Ladies Dining Society (1890-World War I), Cambridge, a private women's dining and discussion club at Cambridge University. Primarily wives of male professors and college fellows. Members campaigned for Cambridge to grant degrees to women, and most were strong supporters of female suffrage. Pioneer Club (women's club), London
Zandra Flemister, America’s first Black female Secret Service agent, died Feb. 21 at 71. Former CIA employee John Collinge confirmed The post First Black female secret service agent, Zandra ...
Episkopon (Greek: ΕΠΙΣΚΟΠΩΝ, "bishop") was a secret society at Trinity College in the University of Toronto, which has been active since 1858 when its male branch was founded. The 225th reading of its original male branch was held in 2011. [1] The female branch of Episkopon had been active since 1899, holding their 182nd Reading in 2019.
Social, traditional, or collegiate sororities, in the North American fraternal system, are those that do not promote a particular profession, as professional fraternities do, or discipline, such as service fraternities and sororities.