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Traditions

Class Ring Gallery

A picture of eight different class rings that preceded the current onyx design. All of them have gold bands. Four feature the Meredith seal.

Meredith class rings through the years. The oldest is the 1916 ring, on the bottom right of this image.

Scan of the 1924 Tiffany's order form for a class ring. The date reads April 1924. The ring was sold to a Miss Mabel at Meredith College in Raleigh, NC.

Tiffany's order form for class ring, 1924

A color image of the current onyx class ring with a yellow gold band.

Meredith's current undergraduate onyx class ring. The design was first used for the Class of 1954.

A scan of the ring dinner program from 1996. The activities include the seating, welcome and prayer, two different speakers, the ring ceremony, special music from the Bathtub Ring, a slideshow, a dessert procession, and closing remarks.

Ring Dinner Program, 1996

Black and white image from the 1998 ring dinner for the class of 2000. 5 hands, all wearing an onyx on the ring finger, are arranged in a circle.

Class of 2000's Ring Dinner, 1999 Oak Leaves

Black and white image from the 1998 ring dinner for the class of 2000. 4 students are lined up, smiling, and holding out their right hands to show off their new class rings.

Class of 2000's Ring Dinner, 1999 Oak Leaves

A color image of ring dinner being held in Belk Dining Hall in 2001. Many students are gathered, some sitting at tables, some standing, and are talking and laughing. Many helium balloons with curly strings float from the ceiling.

Ring Dinner in Belk Dining Hall, 2001

Class Ring

When Mabel Hawley Yarborough Bullock, ‘33, received her Meredith College ring, she could not have known that 80 years later her granddaughter, Elizabeth Hawley Oates, ‘13, would have her own onyx. Elizabeth reflects on the differences and similarities: 

“Although my Granny’s onyx and mine look different, at the core they still connect us back to the same place; they connect us back to traditions, to family, and to memories and lessons that will remain with us forever. On the surface, Meredith was a very different place back when my grandmother was here. But at its core, Meredith was the same place it is today. In its essence, Meredith stands for sisterhood, loyalty, leadership, and so much more. And the onyxes we place on our fingers will be a constant reminder to us as we continue on our life journey; these rings will remind us of what we learned here, both academically and socially, and the great memories we shared with friends and classmates.”

The beloved Meredith class ring has a long and noteworthy history. While the date of the first ring is not known, the oldest ring in the College Archives features a gold band with the letters “MC” and “1916.” The 1917 ring added a green stone to the gold band.

The ring changed into an elongated gold oval by 1922, with a torch (lux) in the center, the alumna’s degree on one side and graduation year on the other. In 1924, art professor Ida Poteat and Mable West, ’24, designed a new ring that was made by Tiffany & Company in New York and sold for $15.00. This ring marked the first appearance of a black onyx, an octagon containing the Meredith seal in gold with oak leaves on each side.

The next modification appeared in 1950 when a student committee selected an oval synthetic ruby with a gold band. The words “Meredith College” surround the red stone, with the College seal on one side and oak leaves on both sides. However, because many students thought this was too similar to a high school ring, art professor Douglas Reynolds led a group including Jean Dula Fletcher, ’53, and Ann Lovell, ’54, in a redesign. An oval shaped cameo dinner ring that Jean wore as a student is said to have been an inspiration. The newly designed ring, still worn today, is an oval black onyx with the Meredith seal engraved in the lower half and oak leaves incised on either a silver or gold band. Jostens Company made the new design available to the Class of 1954.

The only change since that time was for the 1991 Centennial Class, when the oak leaves were moved slightly to allow space for the year. The design returned to the original the next year.

In 1991, the Class of 1992 started a new tradition, Ring Dinner, when students receive their Meredith onyxes. The dinner is the first occasion for students to wear their rings and is routinely one of the highlights of a student’s experience. The Ring Dinner celebration expanded into Ring Week in 1997.

Degree-seeking undergraduate students who have completed 60 hours of coursework are eligible to purchase their rings. An undergraduate wears her ring with the seal toward her; at graduation she turns the ring around so that the seal “faces the world.”

Meredith’s post-baccalaureate ring, introduced in 2006, is available in two versions, designed to suit the needs of both female and male post-baccalaureate students. However, the traditional onyx continues to be offered only to undergraduates.

“The onyx is so much more than just a ring. Shining black with the College symbol, the foundation of this ring is created by not only the Meredith College women of today, but ones from the past. Our Ring Dinner is not merely about getting a simple piece of jewelry, but it is about sisterhood, unity and friendship, things that have gotten me through trying times and heightened the amazing times even more.”
--Kiran Subramaniam, ‘11