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ABOUT US ::
HISTORY
:: International Fraternity History
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Baker History
History of Delta Tau Delta
International Fraternity
Delta Tau Delta fraternity was
founded in 1858 at Bethany College in Bethany,
Virginia (now West Virginia). The social life on
campus was typical of the small colleges of the day,
with activities centered around the Neotrophian
Society, a literary society. Two secret groups,
named in the original documents of the Fraternity,
were operating an attempt to gain control of the
society and its honors.
According to a report by Jacob S. Lowe written in
1859, in late 1858 a group of students met in Lowe's
room in the Dowdell boarding house to discuss means
to regain control of the Neotrophian Society and
return control to the students at large. A
constitution, name, badge, ritual and motto were
devised, and Delta Tau Delta was born.
Important in the early history of Delta Tau Delta
was the initiation of two men, Rhodes Sutton and
Samuel Brown, into the fraternity. They were
required to ride from what was then Jefferson
College in Washington to Canonsburg, Pennsylvania to
deliver the Alpha Charter to Ohio Wesleyan College
in an effort to keep the fraternity alive.
In 1886, Delta Tau Delta merged with the Rainbow
Fraternity, an old and respected southern fraternity
founded in 1848 at the University of Mississippi.
This was in response to Delta Tau Delta's declining
number of chapters in the South.
After the Ohio Wesleyan chapter disappears in 1875,
Allegheny chapter, the fourth and final chapter to
hold Alpha designation, assumes control of the
Fraternity. James S. Eaton, Alpha (Allegheny) 1875,
a "hero" of the Fraternity, travels to Delaware,
Ohio to collect what remains of the organization's
records he can find. After discovering what little
he can about the loss of the Ohio Wesleyan members,
he brings the "Alpha" designation back with him to
Allegheny. There, a well-managed group of
undergraduates handle their own chapter affairs as
well as the supervision of the whole Fraternity.
Delta Tau Delta flourishes during Allegheny's era of
control; a magazine is established; 15 chapters are
founded, of which eight survive (several others are
reestablished later).
Delta Tau Delta now has one-hundred sixteen
undergraduate chapters and colonies, over six
thousand active undergraduates, over one-hundred
fifteen thousand living alumni, and has initiated
over one-hundred fifty thousand members since its
founding. |
|
© 2010 Delta Tau Delta
Fraternity | Gamma Theta Chapter | Baker University
| All Rights Reserved
This site
was created and will remain forever in the loving
memory of John E. Blake III. Jeb was the first
person to create a website for Gamma Theta Chapter.
Even today, his ingenuity, passion, and love for
Delta Tau Delta can be seen in every page he created
and are echoed through the countless awards he
earned for the chapter. Jeb Blake was a Delt
in the truest sense. |