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The History of Zeta Psi
1847 to 1860: Foundation and Early Expansion
On the first of June in 1847, three intrepid
men gathered in a New York home with grand purpose in mind:
the constitution of a new greek-letter society. Their names
were John Bradt Yates Sommers, William Henry Dayton,
and John Moon Skillman; the fraternity they founded that
day is Zeta Psi.
Then students at New York University (itself
a young campus, having only been founded in 1831), the three
men formed the core of the first chapter, Phi. But William Dayton
was stricken with poor health, and departed New York shortly
after wards for more temperate climes. He retired to the University
of North Carolina, where the warm weather was expected to improve
his humors, intending to begin a chapter there. But the move
was inauspicious: Dayton died within the year, and the University
of North Carolina was without a chapter of Zeta Psi for over
a decade.
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The Phi chapter at NYU persisted in his
absence, and graduated its first member the next year with George
S Woodhull (F '48). The second chapter
was established as Zeta at William College in Massachusetts,
but it was to be short-lived: in 1952, the faculty of the university
voted to proscribe fraternal organizations from campus. The
Delta chapter was founded at Rutgers University later
that year, and remains the longest continuously active chapter
of the fraternity (the Phi chapter was briefly inactive in the
1970's).
Three chapters followed in 1950: Omicron Epsilon
at Princeton University, Sigma at the University of Pennsylvania,
and Chi at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. The first
two are still active, as was the Chi Chapter until 1988. But
in the early 1980's, Colby College prohibited fraternities on
campus, despite the long and storied tradition they had enjoyed
there. By 1988, ejected from campus and banned from any formal
rush, the chapter quietly expired after over 130 years of existence.
Problems beset other early chapters as well. The first Alpha
chapter was founded in 1852 at Dickinson College in Carlisle,
Pennsylvania. But immediate resistance from the administration
slowly wore upon the brothers there, and that chapter became
in inactive in 1872, permitting its illustrious letter to be
used for the later chapter founded at Columbia.
But expansion proceeded apace throughout the
1850's at a rate of several chapters per year: Epsilon was chartered
at Brown and Rho Epsilon at Harvard in 1852; Psi Epsilon at
Dartmouth in 1853; Kappa at Tufts in 1855; Theta at Union College
in 1856; Tau at Lafayette in 1857; Xi at University of Michigan
in 1858. Also in 1858, the Upsilon chapter was finally founded
at the University of Northern Carolina, fulfilling the purpose
of Brother Dayton in his last journey south. And in that year
an abortive attempt was made to colonize Amherst College with
the Pi chapter, which was rechartered at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in 1860 as the war among the several states loomed
large.
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Above: the Phi
chapter
at NYU. Below right: the
Delta chapter at Rutgers.
Below left top: the Chi
chapter at Colby. Below
left btm: the Sigma chapter
at University of Pennsylvania.
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1860 to 1864: The Civil War
But those chapters were the last before the conflict
brewing for nearly a century was unleashed finally. Lincoln
was elected president of the United States in 1860, and South
Carolina seceded from the Union, followed shortly thereafter
by her fellow Southern states. Expansion of the fraternity halted
as campuses rallied for war and sent companies of their collegemen
to battle. Zeta Psi too contributed her men, and many did not
return.
At the outbreak of war, the Upsilon chapter at
The University of North Carolina --itself only chartered three years before--found itself
the only chapter of Zeta Psi among all the Southern states,
sundered from the North by the sudden lines of enmity. But even
as they mustered for war and marched south, the Grand Chapter
of Zeta Psi, specially assembled in early July 1862, adopted
the resolution of Brother William Cooke (F
'58) prescribing unity:
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Above: an artist's depiction
of the Battle of Chattanooga.
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RESOLVED, That while we may differ in political
sentiment with those of our Brothers who are courageously battling
for principles which they deem right, no disaster shall separate
them from the union of Tau Kappa Phi.
And the brothers of Upsilon replied by letter
in like fashion:
WHEREAS, The present distracted state of
our country renders it inexpedient to hold our convention
in this State during this year;
RESOLVED, That the Sigma Alpha be instructed
to write to all Chapters, assuring them that though our
Federal Union has been dissolved, still the Circle of Zeta
Psi Fraternity shall never be broken;
RESOLVED, That the bonds of Tau Kappa
Phi which bind us to our Brothers in the North are as
strong as they ever were.
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The Badge of Zeta Psi
by Brother Francis Lawton
written 15 December 1891

You ask me why upon my breast
I wear, tho' bent and grey,
These ancient characters of gold,
Gem'd with the diamond's ray.
A band of students long ago,
When life's bright morning shone,
Gave me this badge, the badge they wore,
To show their hearts were one.
And that is why upon my breast
I wear, as years go by,
These ancient characters of gold,
The Badge of Zeta Psi.
On Chattanooga's bloody field
A pris'ner left to die,
I saw a chief in Southern grey,
Deck'd with this badge march by.
He nursed me, clothed me, set me free,
And when we said good-bye,
He, silent, pointed at the badge,
And spoke, "Tau Kappa Phi."
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Nor was the brotherhood among Zetes limited to
mere words; the moving tale of Brother Henry Schwerin (Q
'63) illustrates the embodiment of love even in the most trying
of circumstance. Schwerin lay gravely wounded after the bloody
Battle of Chattanooga; pinned on the breast of his Union uniform
was the badge of Zeta Psi. A passing Confederate soldier, also
a Zete, spied the badge and carried the invalid to medical care
and safety, ignoring even the imperatives of war for the sake
of his brother. The worthy badge later passed into the hands
of his brother, Max Schwerin (Q '70),
who would one day serve as Phi Alpha. After his death, it was
donated by his sister to the fraternity's archives and remains
among its treasures. Brother John Day Smith (E
'72) witnessed the incident on the Chattanooga field, and later
related it to Brother Francis Lawton (E
'69; FA in 1891), who would
author the poem "The Badge of Zeta Psi," later set to original
music and preserved to this day. The reference to "Chattanooga's
bloody field" is not idle hyperbole, but the recollection of
a rare triumph among such sorrows.
And amid these sorrows and heroisms, when so
many brothers of Zeta Psi perished, so too were even whole chapters
swallowed by the War. The Eta (Gettysburg, chartered 1861),
Psi Epsilon (Darthmouth), Upsilon (UNC), Epsilon (Brown), and
Theta (Union) chapters had vanished by the end of battle, decimated
by fallen brothers or disheartened campuses returning from the
shadow of death. The Theta and Eta chapters would never survive
the staggering losses they suffered, though the others ultimately
recovered and reactivated. And the Gamma chapter—chartered 1861
at the Georgia Military Institute, the only new chapter during
the War—was annihilated utterly by Sherman's march, and existed
thus only for those few years of tumult. But out of the shadow
of war came regrowth and a time for Zeta Psi to expand once
more.
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1864 to 1914: Breaking New Ground
The nation was still young indeed even after
the end of the Civil War: California has only recently become
a State, committing to the side of the victorious Union and
contributing its men though the conflict took place mainly across
the continent, thousands of miles away. It was then only fitting
that to California the fraternities should next have moved.
And as in many initiatives, Zeta Psi was first: in 1870 it established
the Iota chapter at the Berkeley campus of the University of
California and became the first fraternity on the West Coast.
(Though the Iota chapter would not be joined until 1892 by the
next addition, the Mu chapter at Stanford.)
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The end of the nineteenth century was fecund
ground for Zeta Psi. It took root at no fewer than fourteen
colleges in those latter days: Omega was founded at U Chicago
in 1864; Pi at RPI in 1865; Lambda, Bowdoin, 1867; Beta, U Virginia,
1868; Psi, Cornell, 1868; Iota, UC Berkeley, 1870; Gamma,
first at the US Naval Academy in 1874, and then at Syracuse
in 1875 after the government proscribed fraternities at its
military academies; Theta Xi, U Toronto, 1879; Alpha,
Columbia, 1879; Alpha Psi, McGill, 1883; Nu, Case Western, 1884;
Eta, Yale, 1889; Mu, Stanford, 1892; Alpha Beta, U Minn, 1899.
Nor was Zeta Psi content even to remain a national
fraternity, but also pressed northward into Canada. The brothers
of the Xi chapter at the University of Michigan in 1879 constituted
the Theta Xi chapter at the University of Toronto, making Zeta
Psi the first international fraternity as well. Since then,
Zeta Psi has actively bolstered its Canadian presence, commissioning
a director solely for Canadian chapter development and amassing
a long list of successful chapters there. Also in late 1879,
on December 12, the Columbia University chapter of Zeta
Psi was established, taking its name of Alpha from the
long-inactive Dickinson College.
Even as the physical reach of Zeta Psi made great
bounds, so too did the principles underlying its brotherhood.
By the turn of the century, the need for some more centralized
structure pressed as chapter after chapter was added to the
Circle and their correspondence became too much to handle so
chaotically. In 1909, an international publication concerning
the affairs of Zetes was first published by Brother William
Comstock (X '99) and distributed
among the several chapters: The Circle of Zeta Psi. The
periodical, which is still published to this day, contained
in that first issue the exhortation which has come to be known
as "The Vision of Bill Comstock" for its prescience and wisdom:
We feel that the Fraternity, now that
its individual chapters and memberships have grown so strong,
is wasting its greatest possibility of strength and growth
through the lack of a systematic central organization.
In short, Brother Comstock criticized the degree
of individualism among the chapters of Zeta Psi, demanding unity
among such disparate brothers. He prescribed that every member
should receive the fledgling Circle of Zeta Psi, and
thus be apprised of the far-flung doings of the fraternity;
that a general secretary be commissioned to travel among the
chapters and treat with them; and that a foundation be established
for the pecuniary support of the general fraternity. And all
three of his mandates have been amply fulfilled: The Circle
is still published and distributed to the brothers of Zeta Psi;
now the General Secretary is assisted in his rounds by chapter
consultants, whose function remains the same; and the Zeta Psi
Educational Foundation was to be instituted within Brother Comstock's
lifetime, though still in the future. Before Zeta Psi could
turn to such collegiate concerns, war again threatened, this
time abroad.
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Above left: the Iota
chapter at UC Berkeley.
Above right: the Theta Xi
chapter at U Toronto.
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Above: the Alpha chapter at
Columbia. Below: Brother William
Comstock. Michigan maintains
an archive of Comstock's
papers as governor .

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Brother Comstock was also potent in
politics, rising to the chairmanship of the Michigan
Democratic Party before election to governor in 1933,
interrupting a chain of gubernatorial Republicans since
1917, though he would be succeeded by a GOP man two
years later. During that time he engineered the "Comstock
Agreement" under which the federal government ceded
control of Indian lands to State or autonomous regulation.
And Brother Comstock served as Phi Alpha until his death
mid-century, a great statesman and a great Zete.
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1914 to 1920: The First World War
Though already inured to the horrors and trial
that War would wreak upon her from the bloody Civil War, war
in Europe came suddenly in the 1910's and caught a nation and
fraternity unaware. For some time, the United States did not
commit troops to the battle, maintaining an isolationist stance
protected. But Canada was a member in good standing of Britain's
Commonwealth, and as war threatened England, the men of Canada
were called upon to support their ally abroad.
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Above: Brother Dr. John McCrae.
See John McCrae's homestead.
Also see Rob Ruggenberg's excellent
article on the poem.
Below: The original handwritten
manuscript of the poem, penned in
Flanders Fields. (Click to enlarge)
In Flanders Fields
by Brother Dr. John McCrae
In Flanders Field the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing fly,
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders Fields.
Take up the quarrel with the foe;
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high;
If ye break faith with us who die,
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders Fields.
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With the first Canadian chapter only founded
at Toronto in 1879, her sister chapters were still young when
war came to them. Particularly stricken were the Alpha Psi and
Theta Xi chapters at McGill and U Toronto. Even in 1914, they
were already sending letters indicating their brothers heading
east across the sea to the war. In 1915, more than half the
workers at the McGill Base Hospital were Zetes from Alpha Psi.
By war's end, the two beleaguered chapters had given over two
hundred souls in defense of King and Country.
Perhaps most noted among the rolls of the brave
Canadian brethren who went overseas is Lt. Col. Brother Dr.
John McCrae (QX '94), a serviceman
in the Canadian army, who like so many other men did not return
at the close of conflict. But Brother McCrae bequeathed to his
fraternity more than even his worthy life, but also a poem which
has been preserved in great honor as both a historical and literary
work: "In Flanders Fields." The
words are a testament to the heroic spirit in man and are treasured
still by the brethren of Zeta Psi as the hallowed words of a
brother whose time long ago passed.
Finally in 1917, America entered the war, and
with their country, so too did the many Zetes who called that
land their home. At the annual convention of Zeta Psi, the brothers
adopted a resolution in support of the war—which the United
States Congress had itself only declared a few weeks previously—:
WHEREAS, The United States of America has been
forced into the World War in defense of its national honor and
for the protection of international justice and democracy;
BE IT RESOLVED, That the Zeta Psi Fraternity
of North America, at the Seventieth Annual Convention assembled
at Raleigh, North Carolina, hereby pledges to the President
and Congress of the United States of America its unqualified
support of whatever war measures the Government may deem necessary
and expedient, and places at the disposal of the Government
its national organization, its Chapters, and it individual members,
for service in whatever capacities the government may direct.
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Right:
Brother
Benedict Crowell.
Case Western Reserve University
maintains a collection of Crowell's correspondence
and papers; an online catalogue is available.
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Nor was the pledge mere idle words
nor fatuous boasting. Over one quarter of all brethren of Zeta
Psi would serve during the First World War in foreign lands,
and many did not return. Zeta Psi also provided the nation its
first Assistant Secretary of War, Brother Benedict Crowell
(N '92), noted for his bold
reorganization of civilian military control during World War
I. Even after the war, Crowell remained politically powerful,
and was later instrumental in engineering the repeal of
National
Prohibition. When battle and country called, the men of Zeta Psi
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1920 to 1946: Troubled Peace and Another War
The post-war years were marred by the calamity of the Great
Depression in the United States, and Zeta Psi suffered with
her country. The ranks of brothers at campuses across the nation
had been decimated by war, and chapters had struggled to survive.
Yet they had persevered--not one chapter went inactive in those
years. But expansion was slow, as the chapters rebuilt their
strength after the toll. By 1930, the nation had fallen into
deep economic trouble, and students struggled to attend college,
let alone accede to a brotherhood demanding of time and energy.
Not only was the collegiate population averse to expansion;
but in the meager times, campuses were reticent to open their
doors and resources to new fraternities. Only two new American
chapters were chartered during this period, Phi Lambda at the
University of Washington in 1920, and Sigma Zeta at UCLA in
1924. By 1930, no more chapters would be chartered until after
the Pyrrhic economic boom occasioned by the Second World War
that Zeta Psi would reach many of its present chapters.
Yet these decades were not without moments of
profound joy among Zetes. It happened in 1922 that both the
Grand Army of the Republic and the United Confederate Veterans
had elected brothers of Zeta Psi as their commanders-in-chief.
Thus at a dinner held for Zetes in New York that year, the two
men--Brothers Lewis L Pilcher, G.A.R., and Julian S Carr, U.C.V.--shook
hands and broke bread as brothers, rather than the leaders of
two organizations still as militantly opposed as forty years
before. Brother Henry Thomas, the evening's toastmaster, remarked,
"If the North and South had only placed the controversy in the
hands of Zeta Psi, there would have been no war. At last the
mistake has been realized, and now we see our two Brothers,
each in command of his old army."
And while expansion in America had stalled, Zeta
Psi's presence in Canada grew dramatically. The Pi Epsilon chapter
was chartered at University of Manitoba in 1921, Sigma Epsilon
at the University of British Columbia in 1926, Mu Theta at the
University of Alberta in 1930, Alpha Mu at Dalhousie in 1938,
and the Theta Phi chapter would be founded at the University
of Western Ontario in 1947.
The history is still in progress. Please be
patient.
Designed by Jared Sunshine
Taken from The Official Zeta Psi Website.
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