Delta Kappa Phi
United States
Delta Kappa Phi (ΔΚΦ) is an American professional–social collegiate fraternity established in 1899.[1] As of 2017 it has one active chapter.
History
Delta Kappa Phi was founded as a professional textile fraternity by students at the Philadelphia Textile Institute (later Philadelphia University and now Thomas Jefferson University) on November 16, 1899.[2] The purpose of Delta Kappa Phi is "the promotion and encouragement of a fraternal relationship among its members; the furtherance of social enjoyment among its members; and the advancement of the interests of its members in acquiring a thorough education in engineering, the sciences or the liberal arts."[3] Its founders were Leon H. Buck, J. Paul Jones, Harris A. Soloman, and Charles E. Washburn.[2]
Although its founders initially planned to seek affiliation with a national fraternity, that plan was soon shelved and the organization expanded to other schools, focusing on institutions with textile programs. Its second chapter, Beta, was chartered in 1902 at the Lowell Technological Institute (now the University of Massachusetts Lowell, or UMass Lowell), and the organization gradually established Delta at New Bedford Institute of Textiles and Technology (now part of UMass Dartmouth), Gamma at the Rhode Island School of Design, Kappa at North Carolina State University, and Theta at Georgia Tech.[1]
The fraternity was incorporated in the State of Pennsylvania in 1905.[2] By 1979, it had contracted to just its UMass Lowell chapter and North Carolina State chapter. However, in 1998 the UMass Dartmouth chapter was reactivated, only to be subsequently shuttered again.
In 1980, Steve Call, a pledge of Delta Kappa Phi at the University of Massachusetts Lowell died after falling ill as the result of an intense program of hazing-related calisthenics he had been required to perform.[4]
The character of the fraternity has significantly differed from school to school. Despite its origin as a professional textile engineering fraternity, many of its chapters had evolved to become social fraternities with some characteristics of a professional fraternity. While the existing Lowell chapter is social, the now-dormant chapters at North Carolina State and Georgia Tech had been primarily oriented as professional fraternities.[1] The Beta chapter owns a chapter house.[2]
Although a social fraternity, Delta Kappa Phi's origin as a professional fraternity makes it the oldest textile fraternity in America.[3]
Symbols
The fraternity's colors are royal purple and white. Its badge is diamond-shaped.[2] Historically, it published a semi-annual Bulletin and a directory.[5]
Chapters
Following is a list of Delta Kappa Phi chapters.[1][3] Active chapters noted in bold, inactive chapters noted in italics.
Chapter | Charter date and range | Institution | Location | Status | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alpha | November 16, 1899 – 1969 | Thomas Jefferson University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Inactive | [a] |
Beta | 1902 | University of Massachusetts Lowell | Lowell, Massachusetts | Active | [b] |
Gamma | 1917–1917 | Rhode Island School of Design | Providence, Rhode Island | Inactive | [2] |
Delta | 1917–19xx ?, 1998–199x ? | University of Massachusetts Dartmouth | New Bedford, Massachusetts | Inactive | [c] |
Kappa | 1948–2012 | North Carolina State University | Raleigh, North Carolina | Inactive | |
Theta | 1949–1971 | Georgia Tech | Atlanta, Georgia | Inactive |
- ^ Chapter was formed at the Philadelphia Textile School. which became Philadelphia University and is now Thomas Jefferson University.
- ^ Chapter formed at the Lowell Textile School, now University of Massachusetts Lowell.
- ^ Chapter formed at the New Bedford Textile School, now part of UMass Dartmouth.
Notable members
- Don Trahan (UMass Dartmouth), professional golfer[6]
See also
- Phi Psi (professional)
- Professional fraternities and sororities
References
- ^ a b c d Anson, Jack (1991). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities (20th ed.). Baird's Manual Foundation. p. V-74 to V-76. ISBN 0-9637159-0-9.
- ^ a b c d e f Baird, Wm Raimond; Brown, James Taylor (1923). Baird's manual of American college fraternities; a descriptive analysis of the fraternity system in the colleges of the United States, with a detailed account of each fraternity. New York: James T. Brown, editor and publisher. p. 491 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ a b c "Home". Delta Kappa Phi Fraternity, Inc. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
- ^ Nuwer, Hank (2001). Wrongs of Passage: Fraternities, Sororities, Hazing, and Binge Drinking. Indiana University Press. p. 249. ISBN 0-253-21498-X.
- ^ "Meet Don & DJ". peakperformancegolfswing.com. Peak Performance Golf Swing. Retrieved December 29, 2014.
- ^ "About all". Swing Surgeon - Don Trahan Peak Performance Golf Swing. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
External Links
- Official website
- v
- t
- e
Professional Fraternity Association
- Alpha Zeta
- Alpha Kappa Psi
- Alpha Rho Chi
- Alpha Phi Omega
- Alpha Chi Sigma
- Alpha Omega Epsilon
- Delta Chi Xi
- Delta Epsilon Mu
- Delta Theta Phi
- Delta Kappa Alpha
- Delta Omicron
- Delta Sigma Pi
- Delta Sigma Chi
- Epsilon Nu Tau
- Theta Tau
- Kappa Epsilon
- Kappa Epsilon Psi
- Kappa Eta Kappa
- Kappa Kappa Psi
- Kappa Lambda Chi
- Kappa Psi
- Lambda Kappa Sigma
- Mu Beta Phi
- Mu Phi Epsilon
- Pi Sigma Epsilon
- Rho Pi Phi
- Sigma Alpha
- Sigma Alpha Iota
- Tau Beta Sigma
- Phi Alpha Delta
- Phi Beta
- Phi Gamma Nu
- Phi Delta Epsilon
- Phi Delta Chi
- Phi Sigma Pi
- Phi Chi Theta
the Professional Fraternity Association
or its predecessors:
Professional Panhellenic Association
or Professional Interfraternity Conference
- Alpha Delta Theta
- Alpha Delta Sigma
- Alpha Kappa Kappa
- Alpha Sigma Alpha
- Alpha Tau Delta
- Alpha Omega
- Beta Alpha Psi
- Gamma Eta Gamma
- Gamma Iota Sigma
- Delta Epsilon Iota
- Delta Sigma Delta
- Delta Psi Kappa
- Epsilon Eta Phi
- Zeta Phi Eta
- Theta Kappa Psi
- Theta Sigma Upsilon
- Theta Sigma Phi
- Iota Sigma Pi
- Kappa Alpha Pi
- Kappa Beta Pi
- Kappa Delta Epsilon
- Kappa Phi Kappa
- Nu Sigma Nu
- Xi Psi Phi
- Omicron Delta Kappa
- Omicron Nu
- Pi Lambda Theta
- Sigma Delta Chi
- Sigma Nu Phi
- Sigma Sigma Sigma
- Sigma Phi Delta (now social)
- Phi Beta Gamma
- Phi Beta Pi
- Phi Delta Delta
- Phi Delta Gamma
- Phi Delta Kappa
- Phi Delta Pi
- Phi Delta Phi (now honor society)
- Phi Epsilon Kappa
- Phi Lambda Kappa
- Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia (now social)
- Phi Rho Sigma
- Phi Upsilon Omicron
- Phi Chi
- Chi Beta Phi
- Psi Omega
- Omega Tau Sigma
- Omega Upsilon Phi
- Pershing Rifles
- Scabbard and Blade
- Scarab
- Alpha Gamma Rho
- Alpha Gamma Sigma
- Alpha Gamma Kappa
- Alpha Zeta Omega
- Alpha Eta Rho
- Alpha Iota
- Alpha Psi
- Gamma Epsilon Tau
- Delta Sigma Theta
- Delta Theta Sigma
- Delta Kappa Gamma
- Delta Kappa Phi
- Delta Phi Epsilon
- Kappa Gamma Psi
- Kappa Pi
- Nu Beta Epsilon
- Phi Delta Kappa (sorority)
- Phi Sigma Gamma
- Phi Psi
- Chi Delta Mu
- Chi Eta Phi
- Block and Bridle
- Queens' Guard