Private Clubs

Harvard Porcellian Club 1991 Directory

[38] pp.

Privately Printed

1991

8 1/2" x 5 1/2"

w/ 4 page Harvard Magazine March-April, 1991 article laid-in

Stapled wraps

Fine

The Porcellian Club is an all-male final club at Harvard University, colloquially known as the Porc or the P.C. Its founding is traditionally dated to either 1791, when a group began meeting under the name "the Argonauts," or 1794, the year of a roast pig dinner that formally established the club under its initial name, the "Pig Club." The club's Epicurean motto, Dum vivimus vivamus ("While we live, let us live"), and its emblem—a pig—reflect its origins. Members often wear golden pig motifs on watch chains or neckties adorned with pig-head symbols.

Notable members

The Porcellian Club’s alumni include prominent figures in politics, literature, and academia. A 1929 Time obituary noted its roster featured "Theodore Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt Jr., Poet Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Nicholas Longworth, Poet James Russell Lowell, Richard Henry Dana Jr. (Two Years Before the Mast), Novelist Owen Wister, [and] John Jay Chapman." A 1940 Time article added:

The Pork...is very much a family affair. Upon its roster, generation after generation, appear the same proud Boston names—Adams, Ames, Amory, Cabot, Cushing, etc.

Selected notable members include:

Joseph Alsop (1932) – Journalist; co-author of The 168 Days (1938)

August Belmont Jr. (1875) – Financier; namesake of Belmont Park and the Belmont Stakes

Charles E. Bohlen (1927) – Diplomat; U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union

William Astor Chanler (1895) – U.S. Congressman from New York

John Jay Chapman (1884; L.L.D. 1887) – Essayist; translator of Dante and Sophocles

Benjamin Robbins Curtis (1829) – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States

Richard Henry Dana Jr. – Author of Two Years Before the Mast

Edward Everett – U.S. Secretary of State; President of Harvard; Governor of Massachusetts

Hamilton Fish III (1910) – College football All-American; U.S. Congressman from New York

Miles Fisher – Film and television actor

Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. – Author, poet; Harvard Medical School professor

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; Harvard Law School professor

William Henry Fitzhugh Lee (1858) – Confederate Major General

Henry Cabot Lodge – U.S. Senator from Massachusetts

Dan Sullivan – U.S. Senator from Alaska

James Russell Lowell – Poet; Harvard professor

Theodore Lyman (1858) – Union Army officer; U.S. Congressman from Massachusetts

George Gordon Meade (Honorary 1866) – Union Major General; victor of the Battle of Gettysburg

Paul Nitze – Diplomat; U.S. Secretary of the Navy; co-founder of Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies

Wendell Phillips – Abolitionist leader

William Phillips – U.S. Ambassador to Italy

H. H. Richardson – Architect; designer of Trinity Church, Boston

Theodore Roosevelt – 26th U.S. President

Theodore Roosevelt Jr. – Brigadier General; Medal of Honor recipient

Leverett Saltonstall – Governor and U.S. Senator from Massachusetts

Louis Agassiz Shaw II – Socialite; subject of Robert Lowell's poem Waking in the Blue

Robert Gould Shaw (attended 1856–1859) – Colonel of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment

Joseph Story (1795) – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court

Charles Sumner (1830; L.L.D. 1834) – U.S. Senator from Massachusetts

Benjamin Ogle Tayloe (1814) – Diplomat; political activist

Edward Thornton Tayloe – Diplomat; nominated U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (1841)

Henry Constantine Wayne (1834) – Georgia Militia Major General

Richard Whitney (1911) – President of the New York Stock Exchange (1930–1935)

Cameron Winklevoss (2004) – Olympic rower; co-founder of ConnectU

Tyler Winklevoss (2004) – Olympic rower; co-founder of ConnectU

Grenville Lindall Winthrop – Art collector; benefactor of the Fogg Museum

Owen Wister (1882) – Author of The Virginian

John Bozman Kerr (1830) was a U.S. Congressman, representing the sixth district of the state of Maryland from 1849 until 1851. He also served as Chargé d'Affaires to Nicaragua


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