Theta Delta Chi
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ΘΔΧ - Theta Delta Chi | |
Founded | October 31, 1847 at Union College |
Website | www.tdx.org |
Founders |
|
Motto | Our Hearts are United. |
Executive Director | William McClung, Iota Deuteron '66 |
Colors | Blue, White, and Black |
Flower | Red Carnation |
Patron Saint | Minerva |
Principles | Improving the Intellectual, Moral, and Social Being Through Friendship |
Theta Delta Chi (ΘΔΧ, Theta Delt) is a social fraternity that was founded in 1847 at Union College. While nicknames differ from institution to institution, the most common nicknames for the fraternity are Theta Delt, Thete, TDX and TDC. Theta Delti Chi brothers refer to their local organization as Charges rather than using the common fraternity nomenclature of chapter.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Origins and growth
Theta Delta Chi, the eleventh oldest of the college fraternities, was founded in 1847 at Union College in Schenectady, NY by six members of the class of 1849: William G. Akin, Abel Beach, Theodore Brown, Andrew H. Green, William Hyslop, and Samuel F. Wile. In 1849, Green and Akin along with Francis Martindale (the first initiate), organized the Beta Charge (later renamed Beta Proteron) at Ballston Law School. However, two years later the school itself moved and the new Charge was disbanded and the members put on Alpha's rolls.
During the 1850s Theta Delta Chi spread rapidly, adding Charges at Vermont, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, William and Mary, Virginia, Hobart, Wesleyan, Harvard, Brown, Bowdoin, Kenyon, Tufts, Washington and Jefferson, and North Carolina. Few of these remained active for long, although several were later revived. Kappa at Tufts (1856) presently enjoys the honor of being the oldest active Charge in continuous existence.
During the 1860s new Charges, at, among other institutions, Lafayette and Rochester (1867), Hamilton (1868), and Dartmouth (1869), continued to be chartered at a pace that kept slightly ahead of attrition caused by Charges going inactive. The Civil War, however, severely weakened most Charges as men left for military service; many of the earliest Charges went inactive during this period, and expansion in the South ceased for a century.
Only after 1870 did Theta Delta Chi begin to acquire its present configuration. Westward expansion had traditionally been opposed by a large segment of the Fraternity, which worried that supervision and solidarity would suffer if Theta Delta Chi were to stray far from the East. The rise of the large state universities in the West, particularly in the Big Ten, eventually overcame that resistance and the Universities of Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin welcomed Theta Delta Chi between 1889 and 1895. Further Midwest expansion included Illinois (1908) and Iowa State 1919). Berkeley (1900), Stanford (1903), the University of Washington (1913) and UCLA (1929) brought Theta Delta Chi in strength to the Pacific coast.
Expansion in the East during the 1870s, 1880s and 1890s brought Charges to Cornell, Boston University, Wabash, CCNY, Columbia, Lehigh, Amherst, Yale, MIT, Williams, and George Washington. Pennsylvania (1915) was the last Eastern Charge to become active before World War I, although 1904 and 1910 saw the reactivation of the Southern Charges, Epsilon and Nu.
Theta Delta Chi became an International Fraternity with charterings at McGill (1901) and Toronto (1912).
The Great Depression and the Second World War saw a number of Charges go inactive and brought a halt to expansion. At its Centennial Convention in 1947, Theta Delta Chi stood at 28 Charges, a number that would begin to increase only in the 1950s.
[edit] Institutional development
The institutions of the Fraternity slowly took shape during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In 1867 anti-fraternity sentiment at Union led to the disbanding of the Alpha. As the Mother Charge, Alpha had exercised governing power over the Fraternity, but her demise, although temporary, brought about the creation of the Grand Lodge by action of the eight surviving Charges at the Convention of 1868. The Grand Lodge, originally three and now five officers (of whom two are undergraduates) remains the elected governing body of the Fraternity to this day (Alpha was rechartered in 1923, although executive power has remained with the Grand Lodge).
The annual Convention has evolved into a major international assembling of Theta Delts at which all Charges are represented by undergraduate and graduate delegates and at which the major business of the Fraternity is transacted.
The 1881 Convention required that the President of the Grand Lodge visit every Charge once a year; Central Fraternity Office staff now performs these duties. In 1869, the first issue of The Shield was produced, qualifying it as the oldest fraternity magazine. Although it lapsed after one issue, The Shield was revived in 1884 and has been published continually since then.
The Central Fraternity Office, or CFO, evolved over many decades from a virtually one-man job, filled by a Grand Lodge member, and housed in the now defunct Theta Delta Chi Club in New York City, to a professional staff consisting of an Executive Director, a Director of Operations, a Director of Charge Services, a Charge Consultant (formally called a Field Secretary), and one or more undergraduate interns, referred to as Member Service Coordinators. It currently operates from 214 Lewis Wharf in Boston, Massachusetts.
The financial health of Theta Delta Chi was ensured through the establishment of two entities, the Founders' Corporation in 1910 and the Educational Foundation in 1944. Any Theta Delt may join the Corporation on payment of $250 and thereby vote at its annual meetings. It also receives bequests and holds and invests all funds for the benefit of the Fraternity. The Educational Foundation, a 501 (c)(3) public charity, receives bequests and owns the property occupied by the CFO and other assets. It funds the educational activities of the Fraternity.
[edit] Modern expansion
Between 1951 and 1970 the Fraternity added Charges at Northwestern, Penn State, Arizona State, Rhode Island, Michigan State, Santa Barbara, Calgary, Virginia Tech, and Virginia Commonwealth; Bucknell was rechartered also. Several of these charterings brought into being some of the strongest Charges in the Fraternity, but in the increasingly uncertain climate of those times, with anti-fraternity sentiment gaining strength on a number of campuses, a significant number went inactive. The 1992 rechartering at Wabash continues a pattern of reviving inactive Charges; new charterings in the 1990s and 2000 include Northeastern, Nova Southeastern, Greensboro, SUNY Albany and the latest chartering at Merrimack which occurred on February 19, 2000. The Fort Lauderdale and Greensboro, NC Charges mark a significant re-entry into the South.
With the start of the new millennium, Theta Delta Chi has worked to revive several of its defunct Charges, while installing Charges on new campuses. The Chi Charge, originally founded in 1867, and active for most of the time since then was re-chartered in the summer of 2002 at the 155th Annual Convention. Following a brief closure, the Epsilon Charge returned to the active ranks in August of 2004. Theta Delta Chi has also worked to increase its presence in the northeast with the installation of the Iota Triton Charge at UMass Dartmouth in 2005, and the creation of the Iota colony at Harvard.
Yet the active Charge roll call remains in flux, as the fraternity has lost several Charges, young and old, since 2001; losing Omicron Triton at URI (2001), Psi Deuteron at UCLA (2003), Nu Deuteron at Lehigh (2004), Delta Triton at Northeastern (2005), Eta Triton at Nova Southeastern (2005), and most recently Mu Deuteron at Amherst (2006). While these losses are dishearting, the Grand Lodge and Central Fraternity Office has progressively worked for the betterment of the fraternity, and Theta Delta Chi enters the future with the most stable foundation it has had in nearly a decade.
Currently, Theta Delta Chi is working to colonize at Arizona State to revive the Epsilon Triton Charge [1]. Further expansion to the west is planned with an anticipated return to UCLA in 2008. Also, in April 2007, the Grand Lodge with host the inaugural Preamble Institute for its undergraduate leaders, ever hoping to improve the intellectual, moral and social being of its brotherhood.
[edit] Charges and Colonies
[edit] Active Charges
In order of original chartering:
[edit] Colonies
Colony | Institution | Chartered |
---|---|---|
Iota | Harvard University | 1856 |
Epsilon Triton | Arizona State University | 1961 |
Theta Triton | Binghamton University | Never Previously Chartered |
[edit] Dormant Charges
[edit] Famous alumni
[edit] Arts
- John Brougham, New York Graduate 1857, 19th Century actor, dramatist, and orator
- Fitz James O'Brien, New York Graduate 1857, New York Literary Bohemian, science fiction pioneer
- Robert Frost, Dartmouth 1896, four time Pulitzer Prize winning poet
- Alexander Woolcott, Hamilton 1896, drama critic NY Times, Herald-Tribune, Sun.
- Norman Hackett, Michigan 1898, actor
- Bellamy Partridge, Hobart 1900, author of “County Lawyer”
- Donald Parson, Havard 1905, author “Portraits of Keats” “Grass Flowers”
- Arthur Hornblow, Dartmouth 1915, film producer Paramount and MGM
- Frank Thomas, Stanford 1933, Thumpers (Bambi) creator
- George Mosel, Amherst 1944, Pulitzer Prize for “All the Way Home”
- John Nichols, Hamilton 1962, author “the Milagro Bean Field War” “the Sterile Cuckoo”
- James Woods, MIT 1969, actor
- Joseph J. Ellis, William and Mary 1965, author "Founding Brothers," "American Sphinx," "His Excellency"
- Chip Esten, William and Mary 1987, actor/comedian, "Whose Line Is It Anyway?"
[edit] Journalism
- Charles Miller (journalist), Dartmouth 1872, Editor-in-Chief NY Times
- S. Emory Thompson, Michigan 1904, publisher Chicago Times
- Frazier Hunt, Illinois 1908, writer and war correspondent
- Richard Wilson, Iowa State 1927, President of the National Press Club
- Harrison Salisbury, Minnesota 1929, Pulitzer Prize journalist
[edit] Medicine
- Frank Lahey, Harvard 1904, Founder of Boston’s Lahey Clinic
- Oliver Beahrs, Berkeley 1937, Head Surgery at the Mayo Clinic
[edit] Public Life
- Allen Beach, Union 1849, Lt. Governor of New York, Secretary of State of New York
- William D. Bloxham, William and Mary 1854, Governor of Florida
- Clement Hall Sinnickson, Union 1855, New Jersey (Rep.)
- John Hay, Brown 1858, Abraham Lincoln’s secretary, Secretary of State
- Henry J. Spooner, Brown 1860, Rhode Island (Rep.)
- Henry R. Gibson, Hobart 1862, Tennessee (Rep.)
- Daniel N. Lockwood, Union 1869, New York (Rep.)
- John W. Griggs, Lafayette 1868, Governor of New Jersey, Attorney General
- Nathan F. Dixon, III, Brown 1869, Senator Rhode Island
- John Bellamy, Virginia 1875, Senator North Carolina
- Walter Stiness, Brown 1877, Rhode Island (Rep.)
- Thomas B. Kyle, Dartmouth 1880, Ohio (Rep.)
- Frederic C. Stevens, Bowdoin 1881, Minnesota (Rep.)
- Daniel J. McGillicuddy, Bowdoin 1881, Maine (Rep.)
- John A. Dix, Cornell 1883, Governor of New York
- Gonzalo de Quesada, CCNY 1888, artitect of Cuban Independence Movement (statue at Havana Park)
- John H. Bartlett, Dartmouth 1894, Governor of New Hampshire
- Rollin Sanford, Tufts 1897, New York (Rep.)
- Earle S. Warner, Hobart 1902, New York Supreme Court Justice
- William F. Love, Rochester 1903, New York Supreme Court Justice
- Frank Henry Buck, Berkeley 1907, California (Dem.)
- Hans Schoenfeld, George Washington 1907, US Minister to Finland
- Maurice E. Crumpacker, Michigan 1909, Oregon (Rep.)
- Eric Johnston, Washington 1917, US Chamber of Commerce President
- Irving M. Ives, Hamilton 1919, Senator New York
- Arthur Kelly, Toronto 1920, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario
- Louis P. Beaubien, McGill 1925, Senator of Canada from Quebec
- Herman T. Schneebeli, Dartmouth 1930,Pennsylvania (Rep.)
- Henry P. Smith, Dartmouth 1933, New York (Rep.)
- John W. Tuthill, William and Mary 1932, Ambassador to Brazil
- Alvin M. Bentley, Michigan 1940, Michigan (Rep.)
- John W. Brook, Toronto 1946, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario
- Donald R. Steele, Toronto 1946, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario
- Richard Holland, Toronto 1947, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario
- Edward Saunders, Toronto 1949, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario
- Robert L. Leggett, Berkeley 1948, California (Rep.)
- Thomas R. Pickering, Bowdoin 1953, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations
- Jerry Lewis, UCLA 1956, California (Rep.)
- Wesley C. Uhlman, Washington 1956, Mayor of Seattle
- Michael K. Powell, William and Mary 1985, Chairman of the US Federal Communications Commission
[edit] Education
- Elmer H. Capen, Tufts 1860, President of Tufts University
- Albert W. Smith, Cornell 1878, Dean of Cornell Law School
- Ernest W. Huffcut, Cornell 1884, Dean of Cornell Law School
- Frederick C. Ferry, Williams 1891, President of Hamilton College
- Alexander Meiklejohn, Brown 1893, President of Amherst College
- Guy S. Ford, Wisconsin 1895, President of University of Minnesota, Phi Beta Kappa
- Samuel P. Capen, Tufts 1898, President of the University of Buffalo
- Winfred F. Smiter, Bowdoin 1899, President of John Hopkins University
- Edmund Ezra Day, Dartmouth 1905, President of Cornell University
- Chauncy Boucher, Michigan 1909, Chancellor of the University of Nebraska
- Robert E. Doherty, George Washington 1909, President of Carnegie Institute of Tech
- Leonard Carmichael, Tufts 1921, President of Tufts University, Secretary of Smithsonian
- Alvin D. Chandler, William and Mary 1922, President of College of William and Mary
- Francis H. Horn, Dartmouth 1930, President of the University of Rhode Island
- Norman Topping, Washington 1930, Chancellor of the University of Southern California
- Robert V. Schnabel, Bowdoin 1944, President of Valparaiso University
- Julian Gibbs, Amherst 1946, President of Amherst College
- W. Lawrence Gulick, Hamilton 1952, President of St. Lawrence College
- Kenneth Greene, Tufts 1965, Interim Provost of Farleigh Dickinson University, College at Florham
[edit] Scholarship
- Stephen M. Babcock, Tufts 1886, inventor of the Babcock Centrifuge (butterfat testing)
- Herbert E. Bolton, Wisconsin 1895, President of the American Historical Association
- Carlos Baker, Dartmouth 1932, Hemingway biographer, scholar of Princeton University
- Lester C. Thurow, Williams 1960, Dean of the MIT Sloan School of Management
- William A. McClung, Williams 1966, literary and architectural historian
- Michael K. Powell, Epsilon 1985, Rector of The College of William and Mary 2006
[edit] Military
- Benjamin P. Lamberton, Dickinson 1862, Admiral U.S. Navy
- Arthur Japy Hepburn, Dickinson 1896, Admiral Commander in Chief of the U.S. Fleet
- Donald B. MacMillan, Bowdoin 1897, Arctic explorer, Rear Admiral, U.S.N.
- Robert W. Manss, Michigan 1930, Judge Advocate General of the U.S. Air Force
- Robert Lee Scott, Jr., Arizona State 1932, U.S. General
- Rudolf F. Peskens, Tufts 1966, Brigadier General U.S. Air Force
[edit] Architecture
- Raymond M. Hood, Brown 1902, Rockefeller Center and Chicago Tribune
[edit] Business
- James R. Mellon, Washington and Jefferson 1865, President of Ligonier Valley Railroad
- Eugene Grace, Lehigh 1899, Chairman of the Board of Bethlehem Steel
- J. Frank Drake, Dartmouth 1902, Chairman of the Board of Gulf Oil Corporation
- Harvey Dow Gibson, Bowdoin 1902, President of the Manufacturers Trust Co
- Stanton Griffs, Cornell 1910, Chairman of the Board of Madison Square Garden
- Willard H. Dow, Williams 1919, President of Dow Chemical Corporation
- Leo D. Welch, Rochester 1919, Chairman of the Board of Standard Oil
- Myford Irvine, Stanford 1921, landholder in California, City of Irvine named after him
- George L. Smith, Columbia 1925, President of Kinney Shoe Company
- William H. Elliot, William and Mary 1928, President of Border Corporation
- Charles C. Tillinghast Jr., Brown 1932, President of TWA, Chancellor of Brown University
- Karl J. Neer, Illinois 1933, President of Neer Oil Company
- James W. Kerr, Toronto 1937, President of TransCanada Pipelines
- William Edwards, Michigan 1939, President of Hilton Hotels
- Edwin A. Gee, George Washington 1941, CEO International Paper
- Charles K. Fletcher, Jr., Stanford 1950, Chairman of the Home Federal Saving Assoc
- Mark H. McCormack, William and Mary 1950, CEO International Management Group
- William J. Henry, William and Mary 1963, President Time Life Books, Inc.
- John Antonelli, Rochester 1980, Director of Operations of Starbucks
- Jack D. Furst, Arizona State 1981, Partner of Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst Inc.
- Michael J. Saylor, MIT 1987, Founder MicroStrategy
- Tom First, Brown 1989, Co-founder of Nantucket Nectars
- Tom Scott, Brown 1989, Co-founder of Nantucket Nectars
[edit] Engineering
- Alexander Lyman Holley, Brown 1853, Bessemer Steel, statue in Washington Square, NYC
- Dan Geer, MIT 1972, computer security specialist
- Peter Diamandis, MIT 1983, space flight entrepreneur
[edit] Sport
- Edward Marsh, Lehigh 1894, gold medalist 1900 Olympics – rowing
- Walter H. Snell, Brown 1913, player Boston Red Sox
- Clarence P. Houston, Tufts 1914, President of NCAA
- Leon Tuck, Dartmouth 1915, silver medalist 1920 Olympics – hockey
- Stanley Lomax, Cornell 1923, radio sports broadcaster
- Walter Francis O'Malley, Pennsylvania 1926, owner of Brooklyn/LA Dodgers
- William F. McAfee, Jr., Michigan 1929, player Chicago White Sox
- John W. Allyn, Lafayette 1939, owner of Chicago White Sox
- Donald Canham, Michigan 1941, University of Michigan Athletic Director
- Harry Dalton, Amherst 1950, Executive VP Milwaukee Brewers
- William P. Ficker, Berkeley 1950, Winner of America’s Cup Race
- Benjamin L. Abruzzo, Illinois 1952, Crewmember of “Double Eagle II” (first trans-Atlantic balloon flight)
- Mark Donahue, Brown 1959, Indianapolis 500 Winner
- Darrin Nelson, Stanford 1981, Stanford All-American, player Minnesota Vikings
- Chuck Muncie, Berkeley 1975, player New Orleans Saints and San Diego Chargers
- James Lofton, Stanford 1978, NFL wide receiver, 2004 NFL Hall of Fame Inductee
- Garin Veris, Stanford 1985, player New England Patriots and San Francisco 49ers
- John Brody, Tufts 1995, Major League Baseball Senior VP of Corporate Sales and Marketing
[edit] Clergy
- Rt. Rev. John H. D. Wingfield, William and Mary 1853, Bishop of North Carolina
- Rt. Rev. A. M. Randolph, William and Mary 1855, Bishop of Virginia
- Rev. Franklin Clark Fry, Hamilton 1921, President of the Lutheran Church of America
- Rt. Rev. Robert C. Rusack, Hobart 1947, Bishop of Los Angeles
[edit] External links
- http://www.tdx.org/ - Official site
- Baird's Manual 1879