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Delta Tau Delta
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Delta Tau Delta (ΔΤΔ, DTD, or "Delts") is a U.S.-based international college fraternity.
Delta Tau Delta was founded in 1858 at Bethany College, Bethany, Virginia (now West Virginia). It currently has around 115 student chapters nationwide, as well as over 25 alumni associations organized regionally. Its national community service initiative is Adopt-a-School. The fraternity will celebrate its 150th anniversary in Pittsburgh, PA at the 2008 Karnea (international convention).
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Founders
- 3 Values
- 4 Famous Delts
- 4.1 Current government officials
- 4.2 Former government officials
- 4.3 Business and philanthropy
- 4.4 Academics
- 4.5 Print and journalism
- 4.6 Actors, directors, and comedians
- 4.7 Music
- 4.8 Sportscasters
- 4.9 Sports
- 4.9.1 Football
- 4.9.2 Baseball
- 4.9.3 Basketball
- 4.9.4 Other sports
- 5 See also
- 6 External links
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History
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.
Founders
The eight men considered to be the Founders of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity (who attended the two formal meetings which led to the founding in 1858) are:
| Image:Ff cunningham.gif | William Randolph Cunningham (Chair) | William Randolph Cunningham was only a freshman at the time Delta Tau Delta was formed. Because he was older and had become a Mason, however, he exerted much influence in the group. Cunningham, the picture of integrity, was probably responsible for much of the early language in both the Constitution and Ritual. He served as President of the Karnea in 1883. He was also a minister and held public office in the state of Washington.
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| Image:Ff earle.gif | Alexander C. Earle | Alexander C. Earle, the youngest of the group of eight founders of Delta Tau Delta, went on to become a Captain in the Second South Carolina Volunteers, where he commanded his own company. For many years his whereabouts were unknown and he was believed dead, but he was finally located living in Arkansas.
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| Image:Ff alfred.gif | Richard H. Alfred | Richard H. Alfred, at 26 the oldest of the group of founders of Delta Tau Delta, became a minister and a physician.
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| Image:Ff bell.gif | Henry K. Bell | Henry K. Bell, a Kentuckian, lived only six years after graduation. His contribution to the Fraternity was immense; without him, there would be no Delta Tau Delta today. Bell responded to a call for help from the last remaining members of the Bethany chapter who were leaving to join the armed forces.
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| Image:Ff johnson.gif | John C. Johnson | John C. Johnson was a native West Virginian (although at that time the area was still a part of Virginia). He became a lawyer and politician. He was the political advisor to John W. Davis, the Democratic nominee for President in 1924. One of Johnson's favorite pastimes was conducting tours of Bethany and pointing out the room where Delta Tau Delta was founded. He outlived the other founders by eight years.
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| Image:Ff lowe.gif | Jacob S. Lowe | Jacob Lowe hosted the first meetings of the group in his quarters in a rooming house which has now become an international shrine for the Fraternity. Lowe became a professor and later a college president.
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| Image:Ff tarr.gif | Eugene Tarr | Eugene Tarr was a "townie" whose home was only a short six miles from Bethany. He stayed in West Virginia after college. Tarr became a noted speaker, lawyer, and editor of the local newspaper.
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| Image:Ff hunt.gif | John Hunt | John Hunt was the scholar of the group. After graduating from Bethany, Hunt went on to become the valedictorian of his class at New York University's School of Law. He then served for several years as New York's Commissioner of Education.
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Values
The stated mission of the society is "Committed to Lives of Excellence", while the stated values are;
"Truth, courage, faith and power are our foundation, integrity is essential, accountability is fundamental to all commitments, life-long learning and growth are vital, strengthening community is essential to our vitality, (and) brotherhood sustains us"
Members of the fraternity express their acceptance of these values through the "Delt Creed":
I believe in Delta Tau Delta for the education of youth and the inspiration of maturity so that I may better learn and live the truth.
I believe in Delta Tau Delta as a shrine of International brotherhood, her cornerstone friendship, her foundation conscience, her columns aspiration, her girders self-restraint, her doorway opportunity, her windows understanding, her buttresses loyalty, her strength the Everlasting Arms.
I believe in Delta Tau Delta as an abiding influence to help me do my work, fulfill my obligations, maintain my self-respect, and bring about that happy life wherein I may more truly love my fellow man, serve my country, and obey my God.
Famous Delts
Current government officials
Former government officials
Business and philanthropy
Astronauts
Academics
- Peter Likins, former President, The University of Arizona
- Ralph Cicerone, President, National Academy of Sciences
- Hank Brown, former Senator and current President of the University of Colorado
- William Kirwan, Chancellor of the University of Maryland System
- Martin C. Jischke, President of Purdue University
- Tom Huddleston, Vice President of the University of Central Florida
- Denny Roberts, Associate Vice President of Miami University
- Duane Cummins, Dean, Brite Divinity School at Texas Christian University
Print and journalism
Actors, directors, and comedians
Music
Sportscasters
Sports
Football
Baseball
Basketball
Other sports
See also
Jason "Jay" Howland, UVA Lacrosse, '89