The First Non-Sectarian Fraternity
The history of Pi Lambda Phi can be divided into two periods. The
first period, which we shall designate The Founders'
Period, begins with the inception of the fraternity at Yale in 1895,
flourishing in opinions within a few short years to a position of
enviable promise and achievement only to totter and collapse with
equal suddenness. The second or Revitalization Period, dates from
1908, when the Alpha chapter was established at Columbia University.
It is from this chapter that the present Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity
has developed, young, vibrant and energetic, and destined in due
time to be named among the great collegiate fraternities.
The Founders' Period
The early period of Pi Lambda Phi is wrapped in a veil of mystery
and has, thus far, defied all efforts to penetrate it adequately.
Most of the early archives have either been lost or destroyed.
The responsibility for this condition can be easily attributed
to the spasmodic character of the fraternity's early career. Chapters
sprang up over-night and disappeared with equal celerity, leaving
scant records of their short-lived careers. Not even membership
rolls have been found.
Very little is known of the Delta chapter, which existed between
1895 and 1900 at the University of Pennsylvania, of Epsilon Chapter
at Harvard, Lambda at Cornell or Nu at Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. "The Microcosm", a yearbook published
by the College of the City of New York, class of 1899, has a page
devoted to Pi Lambda Phi, whereon are listed the chapters as named
above.
We acquired a letter dated October 3,1896, to Myer Solis-Cohen,
then a student at the University of Pennsylvania, from the Grand
Master of Pi Lambda Phi, Louis S. Levy, and Frederick M. Werner,
Secretary Grand Council. Both of these men and Henry Mark Fisher
were the three men who founded the Alpha chapter at Yale and are,
therefore, regarded as the Founders of Pi Lambda Phi.
The purpose of the letter was to re-assure Brother Solis-Cohen
that the existing chapters were non-sectarian, in reply to a suggestion
that it would be a good idea to have twice as many Gentiles as
Jews in chapters. The Founders went on to advise Brother Solis-Cohen
as follows:
"Your argument (for rushing) should consist of your principles,
your cause and your aim. To back this up we will send you the
record of our successes at other places. But set to work, get
your men immediately, determine your own course of action and
constitute yourselves a living active branch of Pi Lambda Phi."
In writing of the 1897 convention in New York, the Founders continued,
"If your delegation goes to New York in a body, our representatives
will be on hand to receive you. This will be our first chance
to establish that brotherly feeling, which we mean to exist between
every individual member of Pi Lambda Phi."
It is interesting to note that the same ideas expressed to chapters
during the late 19th Century, areidentical with those found today
in Pi Lambda Phi's Rushing Manual and convention material.
During the Founders' Period of most fraternities, the guidance
and advice on a National scale came from the "Father"
or "Parent" chapter and gradually, as the fraternity
grew in size and responsibility, the desire for continuity caused
the establishment of a National Office and governing body.
Why Founders Werner, Levy and Fisher, representing three different
faiths, felt a need for Pi Lambda Phi is best explained by the
following "rush" letter presumably written and circulated
during the school year of 1895-6 at Yale:
"Dear Sir --
In the early part of this year a number
of students at yale met to consider a college fraternity on lines
broader and more liberal than those employed at the present time.
It appeared feasible to found such a
fraternity, having for its cardinal principles non-sectarianism
and the recognition of men on the basis of ability above all consideration.
Appreciating the obstacles that present themselves to the success
of such an unprecedented undertaking, they proceeded with the
utmost caution.
Yet their purpose was such as to elicit
the enthusiastic interest and co-operation of many liberal men.
The following article, which appeared
lately in the C.C.N.Y. "Mercury", briefly explains our
position:
' The
long-felt-want in college life has at last been filled. The influence
and workings of college fraternities, admirable as they are, have
up to now been limited in their scope. And this, not because of
the ineligibility, or non-qualification of those not reached,
but rather by some narrow and illiberal clause utterly at variance
with the original fraternal idea, has defeated the purpose and
aim of fraternity. To counteract this, there have been at times
other fraternities founded by sects not included in the existing
fraternities. These naturally have served as counter-irritants,
rather than as remedies. Now, however, there has been founded
the fraternity which seek only the most broad-minded, liberal,
and progressive men. As will be seen in the account of this fraternity
in another part of this issue, the organization does not present
itself as an experiment, but as an established fact. The fraternity
seeks no members save those seeking it. And only the best of those
who are progressive, industrious, and non-prejudiced, can seek
it successfully.'
Considerations of this character led
to the establishment of a chapter at Yale, which was followed
by the formation of chapters at Columbia University, University
of Pennsylvania, College of the City of New York and New York
University. Others are being established at the University of
Chicago, Union and Harvard. The Undergraduates constituting these
chapters are young men who have gained distinction during their
college career. They have been prominent in classical, scientific
and literary studies. Moreover many of them are athletic and social
leaders in the respective institutions.
Now the fraternity is striving to extend
its influences that it may ultimately be represented by all the
larger universities and colleges. In the undergraduate world,
the success and acceptability of the organization is assured.
However, we are especially desirous of securing the support of
college graduates who have gained distinction in their particular
departments.
Your name has been suggested and it
is in accordance with this purpose that you are heartily invited
to extend us your cooperation by becoming a graduate member. It
is expected that graduate members will be in accord with principles
which occasioned the establishing of the fraternity and they shall
be allowed every privilege usually enjoyed by fraternity members
no longer in undergraduate life.
The committee trusts that you will approve
of their efforts and will honor them by submitting your name for
membership in the near future.
Respectfully,
Frederick Manfred Werner
Louis Samter Levy
Henry Mark Fisher"
Several noteworthy inferences may be drawn from the content and
tone of this letter. The Founders recognized, from the birth of
Pi Lambda Phi, the necessity of having mature alumni guiding an
undergraduate chapter and providing the continuity needed to keep
a chapter alive as its leaders graduated year after year. They
were without alumni members and therefore found it wise to rush
and initiate older men into their brotherhood to fill this void.
It is also apparent that Pi Lambda Phi was established as a protest
and living example against the tendency of fraternities to discriminate
against students for religious and racial reasons. Discrimination
had been growing in colleges and the result was the formation
of sectarian fraternities by members of the minority groups who
were being discriminated against. This action was frowned upon
by many who saw in it the widening of the social breach between
students.
The
"general" chapter at Yale was known as Alpha; Columbia
(1896) was designated Beta; the CCNY (1896) chapter was lettered
Gamma. According to the C.C.N.Y. "Microcosm", Lambda
Chapter at Cornell and Nu at M.I.T. were the next two chapters
and no further information of the early University of Chicago
or Union College chapters can be found.
It appears that internal difficulties presented themselves to
the chapters at the very beginning, for we found in correspondence
between Founder Werner and Rex Max Lowenthal or Beta (Columbia),
that Beta's charter was revoked and the chapter disbanded in order
that two "undesirables" might be gotten rid of. The
chapter was immediately reorganized as Beta Deuteron (Second),
minus these two "undesirables".
According to a minute book of the collegiate year 1896-97, we
have found reference to a chapter at the University of Pennsylvania
with mention as members of Brothers Myer Solis-Cohen (1897), Walter
Felisher (1898), Lowenstein (1897), Harry E. Cohen and Keim.
On October 17, 1897, according to the minute book, a meeting
was held in rooms which had been rented at No. 3 East 42nd Street,
and "after the meeting eighteen gentlemen went to the Marlborough
Hotel and enjoyed a meal. Toasts were responded to and a very
enjoyable evening was spent." The original lease for these
meeting rooms is on file in the archives.
It was from meager sources as these that we must glean our information
about the Founders' Period. Exactly when each of the several chapters
was established, who presided at the installation, when and why
each chapter disbanded - these are questions which remain unanswered.
We do know that Yale and CCNY chapters ceased to exist after
1898, Columbia and N.Y.U. presumably struggled along until 1901.
Pi Lam was dormant until 1906 when an attempt was made to revive
the Columbia chapter. Though it failed, it paved the way for the
more successful attempt of 1908, with which the Revitalization
Period begins.
The Revitalization Period
In 1908 the Columbia Chapter was revived by Walter Weil, Paul
Charles Werner, George Rosenthal, and Aaron Galewski, with the
help of H. Arthur Diamant. They wanted to establish a non-sectarian
fraternity, and they obtained permission from Brothers Demand
and Arthur Shore to use the name of Pi Lambda Phi. Shortly thereafter
in 1910 a local fraternity known as Sigma Iota became the Gamma
Chapter at N.Y.C., and in 1911 Cornell was installed as Delta
Chapter, and from there Zeta at Pennsylvania, Epsilon at Michigan,
and Gamma Sigma at Pittsburgh, along with Lambda at Lehigh were
chartered.
During the fall of 1916 a group of alumni organized a convention
to discuss centralization of authority, administration, and general
national policy. The result was a new national constitution, which
provided for government of the Fraternity by a National Council
much the way we operate today.
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