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The founding of Phi Kappa Psi was in distinct contrast
to the beginning of most other fraternities which grew,
for the most part, from local clubs, formed without any
idea of expansion. Phi Kappa Psi was founded as a
national fraternity which should assemble within its
folds outstanding students of kindred spirits at
well-established colleges throughout the country.
Over 140 years ago two college students, William H.
Letterman and Charles P.T. Moore, in the little college
town of Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, in the hills of
Western Pennsylvania were nursing and watching their
stricken friends during an epidemic of typhoid fever at
the college. Through the long night vigils, an
appreciation of the great joy of serving others came
into their lives. Calling a number of others to join
them, a Brotherhood was founded on February 19, 1852. It
grew, survived and gradually spread among the college
men of the country. Idealists all, these founders of Phi
Kappa Psi taught a new fraternity - a fraternity which
should supplement the work of the university by
cultivating those humanities without which the educated
man fails of his greatest usefulness.
At the time of Phi Psi's founding, Jefferson College was
considered part of "The Big Three" in what was known as
the "Jeffersonian Cradle." The other two institutions
comprising this group, Harvard and Princeton, were of
very nearly equal size and equal high esteem, graduating
predominantly ministers, then lawyers, then physicians,
in descending numbers. Jefferson College merged with
nearby Washington College in 1865, as did our Penn Alpha
and Penn Delta Chapters merge coincident with their host
institutions that same year.
Recognizing the need and value of eduacation, Phi Kappa
Psi urges upon her members the securing of the best and
broadest education possible. But unless actuated by a
proper love for and service to mankind, the educated man
is too apt to shrink from the human race, to waste his
talents. It is to counteract this tendency that Phi
Kappa Psi was founded.
Phi Kappa Psi believes that talents should be cultivated
to be used for the benefit of our fellowmen, and she
seeks to develop among her members a purpose so to use
theirs. But life is dreary, indeed, for him who, from a
sense of duty alone, pursues and unloved task. He who
would serve his fellowman must love his work and exalt
those whom he would serve.
It is this heart-filling desire to serve, and this high
enthusiasm for an idealized task, that is Phi Psi's
mission to supply. It is when a man realizes that he is
doing his part of the world's work that he can approach
his task with the exaltation of soul that compels
success. When to education and the ablility to do this
is added the desire to render loving service, and that
enthusiasm which is born of high ideals, the result is
the development of manhood for which Phi Kappa Psi
exists.
The events leading to the founding of the Fraternity
have already been mentioned. The outstanding points in
connections with its growth are as follows.
Pennsylvania Alpha was no sooner established than
Charles P.T. Moore left his college in search of other
schools in which to spread the principles of Phi Kappa
Psi. He first went to Union College, New York, then
famous place where fraternities flourished. Finding the
field already croweded, he abandoned the idea of
establishing a Chapter. From Union he went to the
University of Virginia, where conditions where more to
his liking, and there established the second Chapter of
the Fraternity in 1853. Pennsylvania Alpha, being the
original Chapter, claimed to have the final decision in
all matters pertaining to the Fraternity although the
presence of Charles Moore at Virginia gave that Chapter
considerable confidence in maintaining a position equal
to the parent Chapter.
Thomas Chochran Campbell
The most active man in the Fraternity at this time was
Tom Campbell, an enthusiast born in India, of missionary
parents and full of the mysticism of the East. To him,
more than to its founders, the Fraternity owes its
peculiar character and strong foundation.
In 1855, the first Grand Arch council was held in
Charlottesville, Virginia. Although little seems to have
been accomplished, it is evident that the delegates from
Virginia Alpha exerted a strong influence and were the
dominant figures. The second Grand Arch Council was held
the following year in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, and at
this meeting Virginia Alpha was formally elected to be
the executive head of the Fraternity, succeeding
Pennsylvania Alpha. Virginia Alpha continued as Grand
Chapter until the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861,
when it, together with the other southern Chapters,
suspended operations.
Civil War
At the outbreak of the War between the States, Phi Kappa
Psi claimed a membership of approximately 600, 452 of
whom enlisted, and by the end of the war, with a
membership meantime of nearly 800, 552 had been in
service, 254 in the Union and 298 in the Confederate
Army. Of this total, 292 became commissioned officers,
including three Major Generals, seven Brigadier
Generals, ten Colonels and sixteen Lieutenant Colonels.
More than 100 of these brave lads joined the eternal
bivouac of the dead in this terrible conflict. The late
C.F. "Dab" Williams donated to the Fraternity an
unidentified, antique, hand-made Phi Kappa Psi badge
found on the Hagerstown pike near Gettysburg, Pa., the
day after the decisive Civil War battle ended at that
place.
A Change in Fraternity Government
Throughout the Fraternity's third decade of existence
there had been a growing demand for a change from the
Grand Chapter method of government. In 1885, at the
Grand Arch Council, sufficient strength was mustered to
carry out a change. At this Council a special committee
was appointed to draft an entirely new system, providing
for a strong, centralized Executive Council, the
officers of which should be graduates, with
undergraduates elected to serve as the heads of each
District of the Fraternity. A special Grand Arch Council
was called, to meet at Indianapolis in April, 1886, to
pass upon the report of the committee. The report was
adopted and the system of Fraternity government was
completely revolutionized. The plan is in force today,
with only such amendments as the growth and development
of the Fraternity have made advisable.
William Clayton Wilson, Drafter of a New Constitution
Brother William Clayton Wilson, who died in 1925, chief
claim attorney of the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western
Railroad Company, planned the new form of government and
drafted the new constitution. As a result of this
farseeing development the Fraternity owes a debt of
gratitude to Brother Wilson, second only to that which
she owes to her illustrious founders and Thomas
Campbell.
The Centennial - 1952
The one-hundredth anniversary of the founding of Phi
Kappa Psi was celebrated with a simple but impressive
ceremony at the old home of the Widow Letterman in
Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, on February 19, 1952. Over one
hundred members of the Fraternity gathered together for
this occasion including three of the grandsons of the
Founders. Then a Bronze Tablet was affixed to the wall
of the home of the Widow's home. Regretably, the
Letterman home was destroyed by fire in 1963, and the
bronze tablet commemorating the centennial was removed
to the Pennsylvania Alpha Chapter house.
Climaxing one hundred years of glorious achievement, the
Fraternity held its Centennial Grand Arch Council June
24-28, 1952, at the Hotel William Penn, Pittsburg,
Pennsylvania, which is about twenty-five miles from
Canonsburg. In the one hundred years from the founding,
the Fraternity had grown at that time to fifty-six
Chapters, forty Alumni Associations and 40,000
initiates. Today, the Fraternity claims almost 90
Chapters, more than 75,000 initiates, and more than 70
Alumni Associations and Clubs
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