| Origins | |
| The
Chi Phi Fraternity, as it exists today, is the outgrowth of three older
organizations, each of which bore the name of Chi Phi. These
organizations were the Chi Phi Society, founded at the College of New
Jersey (Princeton); the Chi Phi Fraternity, established at the
University of North Carolina; and the Secret Order of Chi Phi, founded
at Hobart College. |
|
| The Princeton Order | |
| The
first of these older organizations, the Chi Phi Society, which is known
in the history of the fraternity at the Princeton Order of Chi Phi, was
established at the College of New Jersey, later Princeton University,
on December 24, 1824, by Robert Baird, then a tutor in the college and
later a prominent Presbyterian clergyman. He associated with himself in
the formation of this secret Chi Phi Society, a number of the members
of the faculties of both college and seminary as well as undergraduates
of both institutions. This society ceased to be active in 1825. Thirty years later, in the winter of 1853-54, John MacLean, Jr., found among the papers of his uncle, John MacLean, President of Princeton University, the old constitution, minute book, and ritual of the Chi Phi Society of 1824 and, with these as his guide, he united with Charles Smith Degraw and Gustavus W. Mayer in reorganizing the old society at Princeton along "modern lines." The old motto and a great part of the ritual were retained. In the fall of 1854, Mayer organized a second chapter of the Chi Phi Society at Franklin and Marshall College. Joseph Henry Dubbs, later a distinguished professor of history at this Alma Mater, being the first initiate. The opposition of the Princeton faculty and the prohibitory pledge caused the death of the reorganized Princeton Chapter in 1859 when its records were destroyed by the last active members, leaving the Lancaster Chapter alone to represent the society. |
|
| The Southern Order | |
| The
second of these older organizations, called the Chi Phi Fraternity and
now known in our history as the Southern Order of Chi Phi, was founded
at the University of North Carolina on August 21, 1858, by Thomas
Capehart, Augustus Flythe, John C. Tucker, William H. Green, Fletcher
T. Seymour, and James J. Cherry, who were students at the University
and organized this club to perpetuate their preparatory school
friendships and named it the Chi Phi Fraternity. The idea of expansion
was early manifested and chapters were rapidly organized at Centenary,
Davidson, Virginia, Nashville, and Cumberland. However, the War Between
the States meant the end of all but the parent chapter. With the
cessation of hostilities, new chapters sprang up at Hampden-Sydney,
Georgia, Edinburgh, Mercer, Emory, Oglethorpe, Trinity, Kentucky
Military Institute, and St. John's. The extinct chapters at Virginia
and Davidson were reorganized. Following the War, the University of
North Carolina itself was closed, necessitating the transfer of the
"Alpha" Chapter title to the Virginia Chapter. While this organization
had a constitution and held conventions, the primary authority rested
with the "Alpha" Chapter. When the North Carolina Chapter was re-established, it took on the hyphenated name "Alpha-Alpha." Those chapters of Chi Phi with hyphenated names indicate that upon the reorganization of that chapter, its prior chapter name was already taken by an existing chapter. The hyphenated Alpha was added to the front of the old chapter name. |
|
| The Secret Order | |
| The
Secret Order of Chi Phi, which is now known in the history of the
Fraternity as the Hobart Order of Chi Phi, was formed at Hobart College
on November 14, 1860 by Amos Brunson and Alex J. Beach, who were
students at the college and, being dissatisfied with the fraternities
existing at Hobart, associated themselves with John W. Jones, George G.
Hopkins, Edward S. Lawson, Samuel W. Tuttle, David S. Hall, David P.
Jackson, William H. Shepard, Harvey N. Loomis, William Sutphen and
Frank B. Wilson, and founded the Upsilon Chapter of the Secret Order of
Chi Phi. From Hobart, charters were soon issued at new chapters at
Kenyon, Princeton, and Rutgers. |
|
| Unification | |
| Five
years later the Secret Order of Chi Phi at Hobart learned of the
existence of the Chi Phi Society in Pennsylvania and on May 29,1867,
the two societies formally united. The Northern Order of the Chi Phi
Fraternity was thus formed, and later placed chapters at Muhlenberg
Cornell, Dickinson, Wofford, Washington and Lee, Lehigh, Brown,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Amherst, Ohio Wesleyan, and
Lafayette. In early winter of 1865-66, the Hobart alumni in New York learned of the existence of the Chi Phi Fraternity in the South through John Shepard, a member of the Alpha Chapter at North Carolina. Negotiations for union were initiated but languished until the Northern Chi Phis placed chapters at Wofford and Washington and Lee in 1871-72. Particularly through the energy of the members of the latter chapter, these negotiations were renewed and, after many mutual concessions, the union was finally consummated at a meeting of a joint committee held In Washington, D.C. on July 23, 1874. The new organization took the name Chi Phi Fraternity from the Southern Order, while the fabric of organization and ritual come from the Northern Order. |
|
| Present Day | |
| The Chi Phi Fraternity currently maintains 65 chapters and colonies at prestigious colleges and universities across the nation. | |