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NATIONAL HISTORY
From SigEp's
National Website:
Richmond College, where Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded in the early
20th century, was at the time attended by a mere 200 students, and
perhaps between a third and a half of this number belonged to five
fraternities. Kappa Alpha Order had come there in 1870, Phi Kappa
Sigma in 1873, Phi Gamma Delta in 1890, Pi Kappa Alpha in 1891, and
Kappa Sigma in 1898. Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, and Sigma Alpha
Epsilon also had established chapters there, which had expired. The
little Baptist college was founded in 1830, and many of its
graduates became Baptist ministers.
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Most of the
national fraternities, as their histories show, have been
established simply because they were needed. The desire for
brotherhood was in young men's souls. Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded
because twelve young collegians hungered for a campus fellowship
based on Judeo/Christian ideals that neither the college community
nor the fraternity system at the time could offer. Sigma Phi Epsilon
was needed.
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Carter Ashton
Jenkens, the 18-year-old son of a minister, had been a student at
Rutgers University, New Jersey, where he had joined Chi Phi
Fraternity. When he transferred to Richmond College in the fall of
1900, he sought companions to take the place of the Chi Phi brothers
he had left behind at Rutgers. During the course of the term, he
found five men who had already been drawn into a bond of informal
fellowship, and he urged them to join him in applying for a charter
of Chi Phi at Richmond College. They agreed, and the request for a
charter was forwarded to Chi Phi only to meet with refusal because
Chi Phi felt that Richmond College, as any college with less than
300 students was too small for the establishment of a Chi Phi
chapter.
Wanting to maintain their fellowship, the six men, Jenkens, Benjamin
Gaw, William Carter, William Wallace, Thomas Wright, and William
Phillips, decided to form their own local fraternity. |
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While in the
formative stages, the six original members found six others who were
also searching for a campus fellowship that neither the college
campus nor the existing fraternity system could offer. The six new
members were Lucian Cox, Richard Owens, Edgar Allen, Robert
McFarland, Franklin Kerfoot, and Thomas McCaul.
The twelve met one day in October 1901, in Gaw and Wallace's room on
the third floor of Ryland Hall to discuss organization of the
fraternity they would call "Sigma Phi". The exact date of
this meeting is not known, and if any minutes were kept, they have
been lost. However, the meeting was probably held before the middle
of the month, because the twelve founders are named as members on
November 1, 1901, in the first printed roster of the Fraternity.
Jenkens is listed as the first member.
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