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The victims of 1918, from left to right, were
William McClellan, dean of the Wharton School; George Chambers, professor of mathematics;
and Alden Baldwin, instructor of mechanical engineering. |
Beginning
in 1877, merry sophomores, in darkness near the U.S. Mint, met for a funeral procession
through the streets of Philadelphia. Dressed in black robes and mortar boards,
students walked as the school band played a funeral dirge. Carrying oil lanterns,
the mourners sang and wailed over small coffins containing the source of their
vengeance; the class Syllabus and Plate. After finding their way to West Philadelphia,
the sophomores arrived on campus to begin the ritualized effigy ceremony. With
program and hymnbook in hand, an elected student made an offer to pardon the offending
parties. When no crowd member accepted the offer, the pyre was lit and the Syllabus
and Plate were given their last rights before being placed in the fire. Once the
cremation commenced, a requiem was given, followed by hymns, poems and speeches
about the dead.
Around the year 1880, the Syllabus was discontinued,
leaving students to replace it with the year's worst textbooks. Later, students
added the tradition of burning in effigy their most uninspiring professors, whom
they voted on by ballot box.
Continuing the rivalry between the freshman
and sophomore classes, freshmen contributed to the evening by assaulting the sophomore
class with rotten eggs and other projectiles. This torment often led to fighting.
The cremation exercises were abolished around 1930 after years of riotous clashes
with fellow students and the police following the ceremony.
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