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Reprinted from The Phi Gamma Delta
Volume 53,
Number 2, November 1930,
p. 106-111
Some Notes on Theta's History
Our Alabama Chapter's Relation to First Kappa
Alpha Recalled; The Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Tradition
By William Alfred Rose (Alabama 1924, Yale 1925)
As a part of the introduction to an early history,* we find the following:
The originall of nations and auncient
families is often obscure and hard to be discovered. Histories anent the
beginning of famous nations are filled with fictions and unwarranted
traditions. Families, tho latter, and have the help of evidents,
charters, registers, &c., yet oftentimes warrs, depredations, hostile
and contingent fires, have destroyed these . . .
*The Family of Kilravock, 1290-1847;
published at Edinburgh in 1848 by the Spalding Club. The original
manuscript was written in 1683-4.
How appropriate an introduction to the history of the beginnings of a
college fraternity chapter which has just celebrated the 75th
anniversary of its establishment! "Warrs, depredations, hostile and
contingent fires" have all occurred, yet we are fortunate in having
sufficient data gleaned from early records to enable us to form
something of an intelligent idea of the early days of what is now the
third oldest active chapter of our fraternity.
EARLY ALABAMA GREEKS
Prior to the year 1855 there existed at the
University of Alabama chapters of four organizations which, while then
somewhat different from fraternities of modern times, might nevertheless
be placed in that classification: Kappa Alpha, Delta Kappa Epsilon,
Alpha Delta Phi and Phi Beta Kappa. Of these, Phi Beta Kappa was
apparently then, as it is now, an honorary organization. It did not
compete in the selection of its members with the other organizations
named and it is not mentioned in the memoirs of the founder of our
chapter, although the records of the university and of Phi Beta Kappa
itself show the establishment of its present Alpha of Alabama in 1851
and its existence and the initiation of members by it until destruction
of the university by Union forces during the War Between the States. It
was the twelfth in the order of establishment of the present United
Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa.
The Kappa Alpha referred to had no
connection with either of the two fraternities bearing the same name in
existence today. It was founded at the University of North Carolina in
1812 and was the first of the fraternities bearing that name. Its full
name was Kuklos Adelphon (Circle of Brothers) and its motto, taken from
Horace, was "Never while I am in my right mind will I despise a jocund
friend."
Baird* tells us that its constitution,
ritual and secrets were so similar to those of the original Phi Beta
Kappa (founded in 1776) as to indicate strongly that it was a descendant
of one of the community branches chartered by that fraternity before its
dissolution at William and Mary College in 1781. Its chapters were
called circles which were organized in various communities as well as in
colleges, these community circles being composed of the professional and
gentry classes, united for social and literary purposes. It is known to
have had not less than fourteen college circles with a possibility of as
many as twenty-one, which was a very large organization for that time.
[Archivist's Note: Baird's conclusions
about the origins and nature of Kappa Alpha have received criticism; see
Robert S. Tarleton's outstanding critique at the
Ward-not-Artemus site. He mentions Sumpter Lea (Alabama
1857).]
*William Raymond Baird, Manual of American College
Fraternities, Tenth Edition, 1923.
DATES BACK TO 1842
Baird gives the year of the establishment of
the circle of Kappa Alpha at Alabama as 1848 but there are evidences in
the university records that it existed as early as 1842. Delta Kappa
Epsilon placed its Psi chapter at Alabama in 1847 and the Alabama
chapter of Alpha Delta Phi was established in 1850.
In his "Recollections" appearing in an issue
of The PHI GAMMA DELTA published in 1879, John Mason Martin (Alabama
1856) states that he conceived the idea of founding a society to be known
as the Phi Alpha Fraternity, and with that end in view he devoted much
of his time during the summer of 1854 preparing a constitution and
by-laws for his new organization. Martin has been generally considered
to have been a member of Kappa Alpha and his name appears on its roll of
prominent members. For that reason it is hard to reconcile such
membership with his desire to found a new fraternity, but it is probable
that the internal dissensions in Kappa Alpha, which are hereafter
referred to, had already begun. Moreover, it is known that he was a man
of great initiative and he probably desired a small fraternity with
members of his own choosing rather than the larger group composing the
circle of Kappa Alpha, whose membership is known to have been large
enough to have been a material factor in the student elections as is
evidenced by the cause of its subsequent dissolution.
Martin further tells us in his
"Recollections" that upon his return to the university at the opening of
the fall session in 1854 he abandoned his plan to found a new fraternity
and decided to seek a charter of Phi Gamma Delta, assigning as his
reason the very excellent position which he had learned the Fraternity
held at Union University in Tennessee. For that purpose he persuaded
Theodore G. Pearce and John J. Harris, both of whom were members of
Kappa Alpha, to unite with him in his efforts, following which he took
up correspondence with William F. Owen (Union 1854), who was a native
Alabaman, and an application for a charter, signed by the three named
and Walter C. Roper, who had been added to their number by them, was
then transmitted to the chapter at Union University. Following "due inquiry," as he
terms it, into the character and status of the
university and the petitioners, a charter of Phi Gamma Delta was
granted.
In the meantime, however, Martin had become
involved in what he deemed an affair of honor, resulting in his
resignation from the university. Sumpter Lea (Alabama 1857) has given an
interesting account of the incidents involved.*
*Statements herein attributed to Sumpter
Lea were made by him in a series of interviews with John M. Bradley
(Alabama '12) in 1912 and 1918.
One evening in the spring of 1855 a student
by the name of James Jarvis Cooke, a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon,
called upon a noted Tuscaloosa belle who was related to John Mason
Martin and who was wearing a dress trimmed with some rare old lace,
highly prized but not washable and perhaps colored with age. Cooke made
a remark to a group of students that he had just called upon the noted
young lady, naming her, and was greatly surprised to find her wearing
dirty clothes. Martin, hearing of the remark, began looking for Cooke
and found him the next afternoon reading a book in Woodruff's Book
Store. He asked Cooke about the alleged remark and when it was repeated
they "mixed it," the affair ending by Martin stabbing Cooke in the
abdomen with a knife.
It being at first thought that Cooke had
been fatally stabbed, a hostile crowd of citizens soon gathered and
threats were made against young Martin. His father, Joshua Lanier
Martin, who had been governor of Alabama a number of years before and
who was deeply respected, jumped upon a wagon standing in the street
and, brandishing his cane over the heads of the crowd, dramatically
exclaimed: "Give me John Mason Martin and you can have him anytime you
want him; if he is not here I'll eat an acre of blazing hell." The
governor was allowed to take his son home. Cooke soon recovered.
In view of his affair with Cooke, Martin
resigned from the university. Shortly thereafter, Woodlief Thomas of the
chapter at Union University, then a graduate member and a Baptist
minister, arrived in Tuscaloosa as the legate for the purpose of
installing the Phi Gamma Delta chapter. While Martin was no longer a
student at the university, nevertheless Thomas decided that since he had
been selected for membership by the Grand Chapter he was entitled to
membership.
Thus at 10 o'clock on the morning of Saturday, May 11, 1855, Pearce,
Harris and Martin met Thomas in the City Hall in Tuscaloosa, and were
there admitted to membership in Phi Gamma Delta, and in the afternoon of
the same day Roper, who could not be present in the morning, presented
himself in the same hall and was also initiated. The system of naming
chapters by Greek letters being then unknown to the new members they
first called themselves "Euilada Chapter," taking the name Theta some
time later.
MARTIN FOUNDS IOTA
Martin left the following Monday for Centre
College in Kentucky, where he had been promised admission to the junior
class without loss of standing, and accompanied Thomas as far as
Nashville, Tenn. It might be noted that the chapter subsequently
installed at the University of Texas is largely responsible to Thomas
for its existence, and it is a matter of record that Martin founded Iota
Chapter at Centre College after his matriculation there, but, because
of' the lack of suitable material that chapter died the next year
following his return to Alabama, from which institution he was
subsequently graduated.
About the same time events of great importance were happening at
Alabama. The office of junior class valedictorian was one filled by
popular vote among the students and was considered one of the highest
honors in college. Two members of Kappa Alpha were candidates for the
honor: Sumpter Lea (who was subsequently elected) and Ben Yancey (a son
of William L. Yancey of Secession fame), as was likewise a third
student, Mat Sanders, a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. The Kappa Alpha
Circle became embroiled in a serious internal dissension upon its
failure to agree on which of its members it would support, the majority
action supporting Lea. The breach gradually widened until the minority
faction finally withdrew from the fraternity and disclosed its secrets,
resulting in dissolution of the circle and, within the course of another
year or two, dissolution of practically all of the other circles and
ultimate disruption of the fraternity, thus bringing to an end an
organization that had exerted great influence in early college
fraternity life.
JOIN OTHER FRATERNITIES
Upon the dissolution of Kappa Alpha at
Alabama many of its members joined the other fraternities, thus
accounting for the dual membership of its members. John Mason Martin and
two of the other charter members of our Alabama Chapter were listed
among its members, as were Sumpter Lea and Benjamin Carter Adams
(Alabama '56), and possibly others of our later initiates. It is not
known whether the dissolution occurred before or after the installation
of the Phi Gamma Delta Chapter, but both episodes undoubtedly occurred
at approximately the same time, thus tying our chapter in with the older
organization through their dual memberships and partially accounting for
the extraordinary strength which the new chapter was able to enjoy from
its beginning.
There is an old tradition in Theta Chapter
to the effect that Noble Leslie De Votie, who founded Sigma Alpha
Epsilon at Alabama in March, 1856, was a member of or associated with
the group that was initiated into Phi Gamma Delta upon or following the
granting of its charter but that admission into the fraternity was for
some unknown reason denied him and he used in the establishment of S. A.
E. the constitution and by-laws that Martin had written for his proposed
Phi Alpha Fraternity. This tradition is substantiated by a letter
written by Major Frank Keck* in which Keck states that Martin himself
told him that story. Sumpter Lea, who was a close friend of De Votie and
claimed to be largely responsible for De Votie having decided to attend
Alabama, was positive in his statement that De Votie was a member of
Kappa Alpha and that he joined in the fall of 1854. It is possible,
therefore, that De Votie was a member of the majority faction of Kappa
Alpha which supported Lea, many of which joined Phi Gamma Delta. Lea,
however, did not remember De Votie as a member of the group, but he
added that if Martin made the statement attributed to him he would
believe it as Martin was a man of unquestioned integrity.
*Frank Keck (CCNY 1872, Columbia 1875) to John M. Bradley (Alabama
1912), dated June 28, 1918.
WROTE S. A. E. CONSTITUTION?
The only other documentary evidence of these
facts is in Martin's "Recollections" in which he states that after
abandoning his plan to establish the proposed Phi Alpha Fraternity he
gave the
manuscript
of its constitution and by-laws, familiar only to himself, "to a fellow
student who was after-wards one of the founders of the Sigma Alpha
Epsilon Fraternity and [I] have reason to believe that I am the true
author of their constitution, etc." In any event it is a matter of
history that S. A. E. was founded in Alabama the year following the
establishment of Phi Gamma Delta at that institution and the badge of S.
A. E. today carries the letters
FA [phi alpha] at the bottom
thereof and the pledge pin used by that fraternity also has the letters
FA [phi alpha] across its face.
Under such circumstances was Theta Chapter
of Phi Gamma Delta established. This first organization of that name was
short lived but it enjoyed extraordinary success and numbered among its
members men who took a high rank in the later life of the state.
A university regulation in 1859 disbanded all
secret fraternities then existing. Baird, in several editions of his
Manual, has stated that our chapter continued to run sub-rosa
until killed by the closing of the university in 1863 but we have been
unable to find any proof of such. Martin states in his "Recollections'
that the chapter ceased to exist in 1859 and the chapter roll does not
show any initiates after the class of 1860, the members of which were
probably initiated before that year. Baird's statement concerning the
sub-rosa chapter is, therefore, respectfully challenged.
MARTIN IS PROMINENT
A review of John Mason Martin's activities,
taken from his picture in the university library, is of interest:
Honorable John Mason Martin, A.B., A.M.,
LL.D., founder of Theta Chapter of Phi Gamma Delta; son of Joshua Lanier
Martin (governor of Alabama 1845-47) and Sarah Mason; born Jan. 20,
1838; A.B. University of Alabama, 1856, A.M. 1859; LL.D., Centre
College, Central University and Georgetown University; state senator and
president of senate, 1873-76; United States Congressman, 49th Congress,
from 6th District of Alabama, 1885-87; instrumental in re-establishment
of University of Alabama School of Law in 1872; professor of Law,
University of Alabama, 1875-86;married Lucy C. Peck (sister of Samuel
Mintern Peck, poet laureate of Alabama) of Tuscaloosa; died in Bowling
Green, Ky., June 16, 1898.
Through the efforts of Martin and John J.
Harris (Alabama '56) the inactive chapter was revived in 1876, following
the repeal of the anti-fraternity regulations and it again numbered
among its members men who achieved pre-eminent success both in college
and in later life. But it, too, was short lived and surrendered its
charter in 1879 when the trustees of the University passed new
anti-fraternity regulations.
Theta Chapter was revived for the last time
in 1901, largely through the assistance of Sterling A. Wood, '77, a
member of the second group, thus tying in each revival with the
preceding group. It has again enjoyed marked success. It numbers among
its members many prominent alumni of the university and the loyalty of
its alumni to the chapter has been an occasion for frequent comment by
members of other fraternities. It was the first fraternity to erect a
home on the university campus, constituting the beginning of Alabama's
widely-known and beautiful "fraternity row." It has maintained a
consistently high scholastic standing and rarely have the honors and
activities of its members been outnumbered by those of other
fraternities. It has maintained the high ideals of its predecessors and,
situated as it is in the heart of the South where a genteel background
still counts for something, it has not lost sight of such in the
selection of its members. The number of its members who saw service
during the World War as a goal to challenge the other fraternities at
Alabama. [sic]
As we look back over its history and realize
the position which this chapter has occupied in the life of this
hundred-year-old institution, it was no surprise when Dr. George H.
Denny, a member of Sigma Chi and president of the university, in a talk
before the members of the men's Panhellenic Council at the university in
1927, held up Theta Chapter of Phi Gamma Delta as an example that they
would all do well to adopt as a model for their own fraternities.
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