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Clovia (sorority)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clovia
FoundedSeptember 7, 1931; 93 years ago (1931-09-07)
Kansas State University
TypeService and Social
AffiliationIndependent
StatusActive
Emphasis4-H
ScopeRegional
Colors  Shamrock Green and   White
SymbolShamrock
Philanthropy4-H, FFA
Chapters2 active, 6 installed
Headquarters2067 Carter Avenue
St. Paul, Minnesota 55108
United States

Clovia is an American women's sorority founded at Kansas State University in 1931. It was originally based on 4-H affinity.

History

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In 1930, a group of former 4-H members, women who had enrolled at the school now known as Kansas State University, met often for friendship and the continuation of relationships they shared from their years in the agricultural club. The following summer, in 1931, plans began in earnest to create an organization for themselves and similar collegians who had a 4-H affinity with the aim of teaching cooperative living and providing mutual support. They secured a campus home to live in and determined a name for the new group, with the organizing meeting held on September 7, 1931.[1]

The founders were:

  • Ellen Blair Welsh
  • Wilma Cook Creed
  • Jessie Dean Thacheray
  • Mary Jordan Regnier
  • Emma Manchester Meyer
  • Mary Landvardt Peterson
  • Lucille Nagel Fredrickson

From the beginning, Clovia's Mission was established with the following four principles:

  • To bind together all our members in a sincere and enduring sisterhood and to promote a spirit of sociability and good fellowship among the 4-H women students at Kansas State University
  • To bring out the best qualities in one another through precept, example, and friendly criticism
  • To lend one another every honorable means of assistance and encouragement throughout life
  • To provide happy, adequate, and economical living conditions for all our members [2][3]

The sorority expanded slowly with the addition of a similarly themed local chapter at the University of Minnesota, called Sigma Phi Eta, joining in 1937. In 1939 this chapter formalized a name change by becoming the Beta chapter of Clovia, with its parent chapter adopting the name of Alpha chapter. Scattered yearbook references note that the National 4-H Foundation was involved in coordinating the formation of chapters. Four additional chapters have been formed in the decades since that start. [3][4]

The cooperative nature of the sorority appears to have distinguished it from other Greek Letter Organizations, where several chapters identified their reason for formation being that their low-cost, cooperative model was cheaper than competing dorms, general sororities, or other living arrangements. Today, the Alpha of Clovia chapter operates as a co-op. Rather than a social sorority, Clovia calls itself a "Service and Social" organization.

Each of the two surviving chapters manages its affairs directly with a shared history. Both have chapter homes that are owned by their alumni associations. Occasional meetings are held on a rotating basis.

In 2016, the Alpha of Clovia chapter revised its constitution to operate as a 4-H-themed cooperative house. The Beta of Clovia chapter has a more visible sorority program, although it does not caucus with the campus Panhellenic. But it presents multiple events each year in conjunction with the nearby fraternities and sororities present on the St. Paul, or Agricultural campus of the University of Minnesota. [3]

Symbols

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Regnier was the designer of the Clovia crest and its official pin. The name, Clovia, was a suggestion from a Kansas State professor of the Greek language. Clovia is a Greek word for the clover plant.

Philanthropy

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Both chapters of Clovia support local philanthropies, including the 4-H and the National FFA Organization (FFA).[3]

Chapters

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Seven chapters of Clovia were formed. As a naming convention, chapters were consistently referenced by both their chapter designation and the name of the national organization, thus Alpha of Clovia, Beta of Clovia, Gamma of Clovia, etc. Two chapters remain active. Active chapters are noted in bold, inactive chapters are in italic.[2]

Name Chartered Institution Location Status Notes Reference
Alpha of Clovia September 7, 1931 Kansas State University Manhattan, Kansas Active [5][6]
Beta of Clovia May 7, 1939 University of Minnesota Saint Paul, Minnesota Active [7]
Clovia (colony?) 19411943 ? Bowling Green University Bowling Green, Ohio Inactive [8][9]
Gamma of Clovia February 7, 19541955 University of Nebraska Lincoln, Nebraska Inactive
Delta of Clovia February 25, 19681976 Minnesota State University Mankato, Minnesota Inactive [10]
Epsilon of Clovia February 26, 19771994 Fort Hays State University Hays, Kansas Inactive [11]
Zeta of Clovia March 8, 20032007 University of Minnesota Crookston Crookston, Minnesota Inactive

Alumnae society

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The surviving chapters have active alumni associations. Every year they organize a Clovia Marketplace to sell handmade craft items for the benefit of scholarships.[3][12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ William Raimond Baird; Carroll Lurding (eds.). "Almanac of Fraternities and Sororities (Baird's Manual Online Archive), showing Kansas State chapters". Student Life and Culture Archives. University of Illinois: University of Illinois Archives. Retrieved 29 December 2021. The main archive URL is The Baird's Manual Online Archive homepage.
  2. ^ a b Noted by the National 4-H History Preservation Program, accessed 29 December 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e Clovia History, accessed 29 December 2021.
  4. ^ William Raimond Baird; Carroll Lurding (eds.). "Almanac of Fraternities and Sororities (Baird's Manual Online Archive), showing Minnesota chapters". Student Life and Culture Archives. University of Illinois: University of Illinois Archives. Retrieved 29 December 2021. The main archive URL is The Baird's Manual Online Archive homepage.
  5. ^ The Alpha chapter website, accessed 29 December 2021.
  6. ^ Baird's Archive notes that a 1963 restoration of Delta Zeta's Lambda chapter sprang from this Clovia group, but that the ΔΖ chapter again went dormant in 1976. Under that citation, this original Alpha of Clovia chapter was noted to have begun in 1921, but this appears to be a typo and should be 1931, considering Beta of Clovia's current historical notes regarding national formation.
  7. ^ This chapter was organized as Sigma Phi Eta (local) in 1937 after a positive introduction to the KSU group. At this time it became the Clovia Club. Two years later it was installed as a chapter. The Beta chapter website, accessed 29 December 2021.
  8. ^ Conjectured from a single yearbook appearance in 1942. Was this a colony, but never assigned a name? It failed with the onset of WWII.
  9. ^ The Key yearbook. Bowling Green University student body. 1942. p. 177. Retrieved 18 July 2024.
  10. ^ Yearbook references noted the installation of Clovia beginning with the 1968 Katonian yearbook. By the following year, the chapter was called Delta of Clovia in the yearbook. No predecessor group was named. Accessed 30 December 2021.
  11. ^ Epsilon of Clovia was noted in the 1979 Fort Hays Reveille yearbook for its cooperative operational model. The first Fort Hays yearbook to mention Clovia was in 1977. Accessed 30 December 2021.
  12. ^ Beta chapter of Clovia History, accessed 29 December 2021.
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