The Foundation

The Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Foundation, Inc. was established on July 9, 1974 as a non-profit corporation. The object of the Foundation, as it is commonly called, is to preserve, maintain, restore, and enhance those literary, historical, and artistic properties which are entrusted to it by the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies of the University of North Carolina.

The Foundation operates as the legal arm of the Societies, holding title to the portrait collection, furnishings, and other items of value.The Foundation uses its financial resources to fund portrait restoration, an ongoing archive preservation project, cemetery plot maintainance, and other large capital expenditures.

. It is gratifying to see that the same desire to spread useful knowledge that the Societies first embraced in 1795 endures as the world embraces new technologies.


The Board of Directors of the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Foundation, Inc.

 

The Board of Directors of the Foundation is made up of 15 members. Three of these seats are ex officio: Joint Senate President, Dialectic Society President, and Philanthropic Society President. The remaining 12 seats are divided into 3 classes of 4 seats. Thus each year 4 seats and the ex officio seats are subject to change.




Board of Directors and their Class
                   
Mr. Davis L. Cooke 1998
Mr. Bill McNair 1998
Mr. John L. Sanders 1998
Mr. James H. Slaughter 1998
Mr. T. Kevin Cherry 1999
Mr. John Greenbacker, Jr. 1999
Mr. Edward L. Harrelson 1999
Mr. Michael A. Kolb 1999
Mr. G. Wayne Goodwin 2000
Mr. Douglass Hunt 2000
Mr. M. Keith Kapp 2000
Mr. Roger N. Kirkman 2000
Ms. Carrie Meigs JS
Mr. Theodore Roosevelt Steger Di
Mr. Alex Blate Phi




Work of the Di-Phi Societies Foundation, Inc.

 


In a student organization, continuity is a problem perennially. In the case of the Dialectic and the Philanthropic Societies at UNC, this problem was the main impetus for endowing the University with their libraries in the 1880s. The collections had grown to require full-time staffs to maintain them. The Societies retained their collections of portraits, which required attention at much longer intervals. For several decades, only occasional maintenance was required, but at length, the portraits fell into disrepair through neglect. Many were loaned to various areas of the University and attention to them became uneven.

In the 1940s many portraits were restored and, largely because they were prone to punctures, the canvases were glued onto hardboard. At the time this was thought to be an excellent treatment, but by the 1970s several paintings thus repaired had experienced catastrophic failure from paint flaking off the canvas. Several active members and society alumni formed the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Foundation, Inc., in 1974 to address this problem. Funds were raised for both the immediate and long-term care of the portrait collections, today constituting their main function.

Title to two other properties of the societies were also conveyed in 1974: the archives of the two societies, consisting of approximately 60,000 pages in bound volumes and loose papers; and physical properties, largely including furniture, but also the two cemetery plots in the old Chapel Hill graveyard. The archives are on extended loan to the University Archives, where they are maintained in archival folders in a climate-controlled environment. As papers are accumulated by the societies, they are organized and deposited with the archives.

In the late 1970s the societies' furnishings were restored, including the rostrum furniture and the window treatments in both society halls. Lighting in the halls had been sub-standard for decades, which was replaced with new chandeliers and lighting controls. The skylights in both halls were refurbished and new coats of paint applied to the walls. A Karastan carpet, chairs and a conference table were installed in the Philanthropic Society Hall for use by committees, with a reference library and shelves customized for the societies' requirements.

The Foundation's mandate includes language to enhance those literary, historical and artistic properties ....etc. of the societies. Beginning in 1976 the Foundation commissioned oil portraits and bronze busts of several members, with future additions as deemed desirable. Other current projects include compilation of a new alumni register for the first two hundred years, restoration of the two cemetery plots, and the microfilming of the archives to make them more accessible for research.