Skull & Bones Society
"America's Secret Establishment", by Antony C. Sutton, 1986,
page 5-6, states: "Those on the inside know it as The Order.
Others have known it for more than 150 years as Chapter 322 of a
German secret society. More formally, for legal purposes, The Order was
incorporated as The Russell Trust in 1856. It was also once known as the
"Brotherhood of Death". Those who make light of it, or
want to make fun of it, call it 'Skull & Bones', or just plain
'Bones'.
The American chapter of this German order was founded in 1833 at Yale University
by General William Huntington Russell and Alphonso Taft who, in 1876, became
Secretary of War in the Grant Administration. Alphonso Taft was the father
of William Howard Taft, the only man to be both President and Chief Justice
of the United States.
The order is not just another Greek letter fraternal society with passwords
and handgrips common to most campuses. Chapter 322 is a secret society whose
members are sworn to silence. It only exists on the Yale campus (that we
know about). It has rules. It has ceremonial rites. It is not at all happy
with prying, probing citizens - known among initiates as 'outsiders' or
'vandals'. Its members always deny membership (or are supposed to deny membership)
and in checking hundreds of autobiographical listings for members we found
only half a dozen who cited an affiliation with Skull & Bones. The rest
were silent. An interesting point is whether the many members in various
Administrations or who hold government positions have declared their members
in the biographical data supplied for FBI 'background checks'.
Above all, The Order is powerful, unbelievably powerful. If the reader will
persist and examine the evidence to be presented - which is overwhelming
- there is no doubt his view of the world will suddenly come sharply into
focus, with almost frightening clarity.
It is a Senior year society which exists only at Yale. Members are chosen
in their Junior year and spend only one year on campus, the Senior year,
with Skull & Bones. In other words, the organization is oriented to
the graduate outside world. The Order meets annually - patriarchies only
- on Deer Island in the St. Lawrence River.
Senior societies are unique to Yale. There are two other senior societies
at Yale, but none elsewhere. Scroll & Key and Wolf's Head are supposedly
competitive societies founded in the mid-19 th century. We believe these
to be part of the same network. Rosenbaum commented in his "Esquire"
article, very accurately, that anyone in the Eastern Liberal Establishment
who is not a member of Skull & Bones is almost certainly a member of
either Scroll & Key or Wolf's Head.
.. The selection procedure for new members of The Order has not changed
since 1832. Each year 15, and only 15, never fewer, are selected. In the
past 150 years about 2500 Yale graduates have been initiated into The Order.
At any time about 500-600 are alive and active. Roughly about one- quarter
of these take an active role in furthering the objectives of The Order.
The others either lose interest or change their minds. They are silent drop-outs.
.. The most likely potential member is from a Bones family, who is energetic,
resourceful, political and probably an amoral team player. ... Honors and
financial rewards are guaranteed by the power of The Order. But the price
of these honors and rewards is sacrifice to the common goal, the goal of
The Order. Some, perhaps many, have not been willing to pay this price.
The Old Line American families and their descendants involved in the Skull
& Bones are names such as: Whitney, Perkins, Stimson, Taft, Wadsworth,
Gilman, Payne, Davidson, Pillsbury, Sloane, Weyerhaeuser, Harriman, Rockefeller,
Lord, Brown, Bundy, Bush and Phelps.