KAPPA ALPHA SOCIETY
'The Kappa Alpha Society' ('ΚΑ'), founded in 1825, is the progenitor of the modern fraternity system in North America according to Baird's Manual. As of 2007, there were seven active chapters in the United States and Canada.
| Contents |
| History |
| Chapters |
| Coeducation |
| Contributing Members |
| References |
| External links |
| See also |
History
According to Baird's Manual, nine undergraduates at Union College in Schenectady, New York — John Hart Hunter, John McGeoch, Isaac W. Jackson, Thomas Hun, Orlando Meads, James Proudfit, and Joseph Anthony Constant of the class of 1826, and Arthur Burtis and Joseph Law of the Class of 1827—established the Society on November 26, 1825 from an informal group calling itself The Philosophers, which was established by Hunter, Jackson, and Hun in 1823. The organization represents the middle link between secret societies, literary societies, and Greek-letter organizations like Phi Beta Kappa and thus is commonly referred to as the first social fraternity. Still keeping true to its roots, Kappa Alpha still has a structure identical to that of its founding in 1825 as a secret society.
The first expansion of the Society took place in 1833 at Williams College at the request of fourteen students led by Azariah S. Clark of the class of 1834.
The Kappa Alpha Society, emulated by Sigma Phi (est. 1827) and Delta Phi (est. 1827), constitute the Union Triad, the pioneers of the North American system of social fraternities.
This organization is not to be confused with the Kappa Alpha Order, a completely separate fraternity that operates primarily at schools in the South and border states.
The Kappa Alpha Society was distinguished by a highly selective process of chapter formation, averaging
a steady pace of one a decade for the society's first 150 years..
Chapters
Chapters are designated with an abbreviation of the institution's Latin name.
| No. | Dates | Chapter | College or University | Location | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Nov. 26, 1825-2003 | New York Alpha (CC) | Union College | Schenectedy, New York | ''Dormant'' |
| 2. | Oct. 29, 1833-1983 | Massachusettes Alpha (CG) | Williams College | Williamstown, Massachusetts | ''Dormant'' |
| 3. | (As local 1842)Nov. 26, 1844-1854, 1879-present | New York Beta (CH) | Hobart College | Geneva, New York | 'Active' |
| 4. | Oct. 21, 1852-1855, 1983-1998 | New Jersey Alpha (CNC) | Princeton University | Princeton, New Jersey | ''Dormant'' |
| 5. | Jan. 8, 1857-1861 | Virginia Alpha (VV) | University of Virginia | Charlottesville, Virginia | ''Dormant'' |
| 6. | Nov. 12, 1868-1990, 2007-present | New York Gamma (VC) | Cornell University | Ithaca, New York | 'Active' |
| 7. | Feb. 19, 1892-present | Ontario Alpha (VT) | University of Toronto | Toronto, Ontario | 'Active' |
| 8. | Jan. 2, 1894-present | Pennsylvania Alpha (VL) | Lehigh University | Bethlehem, Pennsylvania | 'Active' |
| 9. | Apr. 21, 1899-1971, 1987-2006 | Quebec Alpha (VM) | McGill University | Montreal, Quebec | ''Dormant'' |
| 10. | (As local Apr. 1909)Apr. 26, 1913-present | Pennsylvania Beta (VP) | University of Pennsylvania | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 'Active' |
| 11. | Feb. 14, 1948-present | Ontario Beta (VOO) | University of Western Ontario | London, Ontario | 'Active' |
| 12. | (This was a Delta Upsilon and then a Delta Sigma chapter.)Mar. 18, 1967-1980, 1997 | Connecticut Alpha (VW) | Wesleyan University | Middletown, Connecticut | ''Dormant'' |
| 13. | Nov. 5, 1988-present | Alberta Alpha (VA) | University of Alberta | Edmonton, Alberta | 'Active' |
| 14. | Nov. 23, 1991-1999 | Alberta Beta (VAC) | University of Calgary | Calgary, Alberta | ''Dormant'' |
Coeducation
Several chapters have been co-educated (male and female members) in the past, such as the chapter at Wesleyan University, which existed from 1967 to about 1980, (there was a small co-ed group of Wesleyan initiates in 1997 but who never met as a chapter). Other chapters were co-ed as well, on a home-rule basis. The refusal of the Willimas chapter to co-educate led to the termination of that chapter. Kappa Alpha may now prohibit coeducated chapters. Kappa Alpha will not be able to re-enter those colleges, (Williams and Wesleyan) without co-educating, and is likely effectively proscribed from returning to others for the same reason.
Contributing Members
★ John Hart Hunter, Union College, 1824. Founder.
★ Fitz Hugh Ludlow, Union College, 1856. Song writer, author and editor.
References
★ Kappa Alpha Society. (1881). ''A biographical record of the Kappa Alpha Society in Williams College, Williamstown, Mass.: From its foundation to the present time. 1831-1881''. New York, NY: S. W. Green's Son.
★ Kappa Alpha Society. (2002). ''A directory of Kappa Alpha 2002: 175th anniversary edition''. Purchase, NY: Bernard C. Harris Publishing Company.
★ Tarleton, Robert S. (1993). ''The Spirit of Kappa Alpha: The oldest Greek-letter social fraternity in prose, poetry and picture''. New York, NY: John Hart Hunter Press.
★ The Executive Council of The Kappa Alpha Society. (1941). ''Kappa Alpha Record: 1825-1940''. Clinton, MA: The Colonial Press.
★ The Executive Council of The Kappa Alpha Society. (1950). ''Directory of the Kappa Alpha Society 1950''. St. Albans, VT: The North Country Press.
★ The Executive Council of The Kappa Alpha Society. (1960). ''Kappa Alpha Record 1825-1960''. Utica, NY: Thomas J. Griffiths Sons.
★ The Executive Council of The Kappa Alpha Society. (1976). ''Kappa Alpha Record 1825-1976: Sesquicentennial edition''. Ithaca, NY: Art Craft Printers.
External links
★ The Kappa Alpha Society, The Official Website of the Kappa Alpha Society
★ The Political Graveyard, U.S. Political Biographies
See also
★ Sigma Chi/Brief History of Fraternities/Phi Beta Kappa
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