In Review

My father, Hiram J. Neun, attended the University, as did his five sisters, two cousins, and my mother. My dad kept a yellow and green hat that he always said was his freshman beanie. Can you tell me if that is true? 鈥擬ary Ellen Neun Parry 鈥63, Belle Mead, New Jersey
The story behind freshman caps knits together 66 years of student traditions and some colorful etymology.
The first mention of organized cap-wearing at the University appears in a 1900 issue of the 人妻少妇专区 (it would become the 人妻少妇专区-Times in 1955): 鈥淎 large number of the Sophomore Class are wearing class caps. Some of the Seniors are doing the same, and the Freshman [sic] are likely to have a class cap soon.鈥

There is no further mention of caps until May 1904, when the newspaper reports that the freshmen at Syracuse University 鈥渂uried with appropriate ceremony a little green cap, indicative of their first year in college.鈥
The fact that student publications at colleges and universities reported each other鈥檚 campus news is important: any number of fads and rituals (school colors and caps included) were spread this way.
The Class of 1908 is credited with starting Rochester鈥檚 tradition of freshman class caps (theirs were the 鈥渞egulation gray Eton cap with green button鈥). Rather than bury the caps, they threw them on a bonfire at the end of the term in June 1905.
Why green, when orange was chosen as Syracuse鈥檚 official color in 1890, and Rochester selected dandelion yellow in 1893? According to the Oxford English Dictionary, 鈥済reen鈥 began to denote immaturity in the 14th century. First-years were more than just green鈥斺淭he Pea-Green Freshman鈥 is found in the 1903 publication Some Songs We Sing at Rochester. Dartmouth still has 鈥減ea greens,鈥 to complement its school color.
Rochester student handbooks cite caps as a freshman requirement between 1905 and 1937, and the caps also served an interclass-rivalry hazing purpose: sophomores set traditions for the freshmen, and for a time entrepreneurially sold the hats as a fundraising engine. Sophomores also made the rules for when hats could be officially doffed鈥攅ither by a specified date or if the freshmen won the annual Flag Rush.
Hiram Neun enrolled with the Class of 1933, but the group photograph in the Interpres shows the class headgear to be the Eton caps. 鈥淔or exorbitant sums we were allowed to purchase very unbecoming green hats, which promptly shrunk several sizes after the first rain,鈥 reported Robert Metzdorf 鈥33, 鈥39 (PhD) on the 鈥淐lass History鈥 page.
Although your father withdrew for health reasons after his freshman year, he was readmitted with the Class of 1935: his knitted cap (the student handbook calls it a 鈥渢oque鈥) looks very like those worn by the freshmen of 1935鈥攇reen with a yellow stripe, topped with a matching pompom.
World War II saw the suspension of many traditions, but by 1949 caps were back, and both men and women continued to wear them until 1967.
The earliest frosh cap preserved in the archives belonged to Julius Kuhnert, Class of 1914. Made of felted wool, it鈥檚 green with a yellow button on the top. By 1934, the colors had changed to blue and yellow.
Cap, toque, beanie, or bucket? The archives welcomes any hat thrown in its ring: Jane Speyer Weber 鈥66, 鈥67 (MA) and Peter Tyor 鈥66 graciously donated a yellow-and-blue beanie and a blue-and-yellow bucket-style hat, respectively, at Meliora Weekend 2016.
Need History?
Do you have a question about University history? Email it to rochrev@rochester.edu. Please put 鈥淎sk the Archivist鈥 in the subject line.锘匡豢