Following is a list of Fly Club members. Fly Club is a final club for male students at Harvard University. Member Initiated into the D.U. Club, which merged with the Fly Club in 1996, is indicated with a *.
^Yeomans, Henry (1977). Abbott Lawrence Lowell. Arno Press. ISBN0-405-10009-4. p.38. "He tried to avoid what he considered Wilson's mistake in alienating them at Princeton, and he accepted honorary membership in the Fly in 1904."
^Charles Stearns Wheeler (1816-1843). The Walden Woods Project. Retrieved May 16, 2024, [2]
^ abcdefghijklmnopqCatalogue of the Fly Club of Harvard University, 1836–1911. Camb. (Mass.): The University Press, 1911 [3]
^Gardner, Martin (1995). The Annotated Casey at the Bat: A Collection of Ballads about the Mighty Casey/Third, Revised Edition. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN0-486-28598-7. p.1 [5]
^"But one prominent alum, Evan Thomas, who is the Washington bureau chief for Newsweek magazine, said that his informal polling of fellow alumni showed strong support for a co-ed Fly." Rimer, Sara. "Harvard Journal; All-Male Club Opens Its Door Warily." The New York Times, October 9, 1993. [6]
^"[Grew] was critical of Berlin society as being too rank-conscious, preferring Vienna society where admission to the inner circle depended on personal merit alone. This had been his reason for favoring the Fly Club at Harvard." Heinrichs, Waldo H. Jr. American Ambassador: Joseph C. Grew and the Development of the United States Diplomatic Tradition. Oxford University Press, 1986. [7]
^"Harvard Journal: All-Male Club Opens Its Doors Warily," The New York Times 9 October 1993. LexisNexis Academic.
^FDR Library, biography of James Roosevelt [8]Archived 2004-09-03 at the Wayback Machine: "He was a member of the Signet Society, the Fly Club, Institute of 1770 and Hasty Pudding Club"
^Edlich, Alexander R (1993): Harvard 'final club' to may become first to admit women, The Dartmouth Online, October 19, 1993 [9]Archived 2014-11-11 at the Wayback Machine: "According to The Crimson, Massachusetts Governor William Weld, who graduated from Harvard and was a member of the Fly Club, wrote the club in 1987 urging it to admit women."
^Catalogue of the Fly Club of Harvard University, 1836–1941. Camb. (Mass.): The University Press, 1941 [10]
^"Francis H. Cabot, 86, Dies; Created Notable Gardens," The New York Times, Nov. 27, 2011 [11]