- Rinehart
The cry of Rinehart! (more fully Oh, R-i-i-i-n-e-HART!) was a part of
Harvard University student and alumni culture in the early decades of the20th Century .The origin of the chant is explained in an undated newspaper clipping (presumably from the
Harvard Crimson of either June 1899 or 1900) contained in the Harvard University Archives scrapbook of R. R. Kent, '00. (Harvard Archives HUD 900.44 F)""HARVARD CALLS HIM
“RINEHART, O RINEHART!” THE CRY IN THE YARD.
WATCHMAN POWERLESS TO INTERRUPT THE VOLUME OF SOUND.
SIMPLE HAIL OF FRIENDS IRRITATES MEN WHO WERE TRYING TO STUDY
John Gordon Brice Rinehart of Waynesburg Penn, a senior at Harvard College, has sprung into notoriety the past few days, due to no action of his own. Rinehart, who is an earnest student, has been in great demand as a tutor to other men in his courses. As he lives at the top of Grays hall his friends have sought to find out whether he was in or not by directing plaintive cries of “Rinehart, O Rinehart” at his windows.
This made the studiously inclined who swell in the neighboring dormitories very tired and they determined to quell Rinehart, so promptly at dark for the past three nights the college yard has resounded with the cries of “Rinehart, O Rinehart.”
First one end of the yard and then other would send up the plaintive cry, and then all the buildings would swell as if in chorus with the same old plaint.
Last night the college police tried to stop the racket, but the boys by a little teamwork kept them running from one dormitory to the other.
One man with a megaphone was particularly offensive, but despite the police vigil of three hours the megaphonist was still summoning Rinehart in tearful tones.
As to Rinehart? Well, he took it philosophically, even good-humouredly. He was born in the Pennsylvania coal region, he said, and was used to the noise. It was a good advertisement for him in his business as a tutor, also. And he said he had no kick coming.""
For the next forty years or so, cries of "Oh, R-i-i-i-n-e-HART!" could be heard at random times wherever Harvard men traveled or congregated, reportedly being heard at locations as far from Harvard as
Cairo .The call was included by journalist George Frazier in his 1932 song "Harvard Blues" (music by Tab Smith), recorded in 1941 by
Count Basie and included on the compilation "The Count Basie Story, Disc 3 - Harvard Blues" (2001, Proper Records).External links
* [http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/0902168.html Harvard Magazine article referencing the phenomenon]
* [http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-6494.1996.tb00822.x "Gordon Allport and the legend of Rinehart", "Journal of Personality" Volume 64 Number 1 (March 1996) (PDF)]
* [http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/003880.html Rinehart] Language Log article on the history and evolution of the Rinehart legend.
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