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Delta Kappa Epsilon

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ΔΚΕ - Delta Kappa Epsilon
The crest of ΔΚΕ
Motto Kerothen Philoi Aei

"Friends From The Heart Forever"

Colors Gules (Crimson), Azure (Blue), Or (Gold)
Symbol Rampant Lion
Flower None
Founded June 22, 1844 at No. 12 Old South Hall, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
Fraternity type Social
Scope United States, Canada
Headquarters P.O. Box 8360
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Chapters 63 active
Homepage http://www.dke.org

Delta Kappa Epsilon (ΔΚΕ; also pronounced D K E or "Deke") is the second oldest secret college men's fraternity of New England origin. ΔΚΕ was founded at Yale College by 15 men of the sophomore class who, upon hearing that some but not all of them had been invited to join the two existing societies (Alpha Delta Phi and Psi Upsilon), instead elected to form their own fraternity. These men sought to establish a fellowship "where the candidate most favored was he who combined in the most equal proportions the gentleman, the scholar, and the jolly good fellow."

Contents

[edit] Founding and History

Original version of the ΔΚΕ coat of arms

The society was founded June 22, 1844, in number 12 Old South Hall, Yale College. At this meeting, the Fraternity's secret and open Greek mottos were devised. The open motto is "Kerothen Philoi Aei" ("Friends from the Heart, Forever"). The pin and secret handshake was also devised. The DKE pin shows ΔΚΕ on a scroll, upon a diamond with a star in each corner. DKE's heraldic colours are azure (blue), or (gold), and gules (crimson) and its flag is a triband of those colours with a left-facing rampant lion in the middle. The Phi chapter is the only fraternity at Yale, which has never gone inactive and also holds the distinction of being the longest uninterrupted chapter of DKE.

Within three years of the founding at Yale, chapters were founded at Bowdoin, Princeton University, Colby College, and Amherst College. Since that time, DKE has grown to over 64 chapters and has initiated over 85,000 members across North America.

DKE is inextricably linked to the history of the United States of America, as its members have included five of forty-three Presidents of the United States: Rutherford B. Hayes, Theodore Roosevelt, Gerald Ford, George H. W. Bush, and George W. Bush. Another way to look at this impact, is that five of the most recent 25 US Presidents (20%) were Dekes (at the time of George W. Bush's election).

Some might argue that Franklin Delano Roosevelt would be the 6th US President that was a DKE. FDR was a member of the Alpha Chapter of DKE at Harvard, also known as the "Dickey Club." However the Alpha Chapter derecognized by DKE International due to the chapter's stance on dual membership with other fraternities.

During the Civil War, the first Union officer killed in battle was a Deke, Theodore Winthrop of Phi. Six weeks after Lee's surrender at Appomattox, Philip Spence of Zeta commanded Confederate troops in their last organized battle of the war.

In the election of 1876, the Republican Party chose between two Dekes, nominating Hayes rather than rival and fellow DKE James G. Blaine, who later served two administrations as Secretary of State and who authored the Fourteenth Amendment; Blaine also ran unsuccessfully for President.
Flag of ΔΚΕ

During the Spanish-American War, the first American officer to be killed was a Deke, Surgeon John B. Gibbs (Rutgers), and his brother in DKE J. Frank Aldritch (DePauw) died when the USS Maine was sunk. In this same war, Deke Theodore Roosevelt distinguishes himself and starts on his path to the Presidency.

The fraternity's membership has also included dozens of American and Canadian politicians, businessmen, sports figures, and artists who have achieved iconic status, including among many others J.P. Morgan, William Randolph Hearst, Cole Porter, Henry Cabot Lodge, Dick Clark, Tom Landry, and George Steinbrenner. Deke flags have been carried to the North Pole by its discoverer, Admiral Robert Peary (Theta), and to the Moon by astronaut Alan Bean (Omega Chi).
Pin of ΔΚΕ

Delta Kappa Epsilon administers a charitable organization called the Rampant Lion Foundation. As well, Deke has championed an organization call ROAR, which stands for Restore Our Associational Rights. ROAR campaigns for the freedom of fraternities and Greek organizations in general to operate without interference and discrimination from university administrations or others.

Interesting Deke Trivia:

Traditionally an Eastern Seaboard fraternity, DKE's Yale chapter had an early reputation as a Southerner's fraternity. Many wealthy plantation owners sent their sons to Yale where they joined DKE. Two of the original founders were from the South and 13 out of 38 members of 1845 and 1846 were from the South. DKE's first chapter in the South was Gamma chapter founded in 1847 (Vanderbilt University) followed by Psi chapter at the University of Alabama in the same year.

Delta Kappa Epsilon's first West Coast chapter was founded at the University of California, Berkeley on Halloween night, 1876. DKE is the fourth fraternity at the prestigious institution. Their rival, Stanford University, followed suit in 1901.

Delta Kappa Epsilon became an international fraternity with the addition of the Alpha Phi chapter in 1898 at the University of Toronto, Canada.

DKE is the only fraternity that has a club in New York. The DKE Club of New York was founded in 1885 and is currently in residence at the Yale Club of New York City. The club is a rare survivor of the fraternity clubs that once proliferated at the turn of the century and then folded.

The Sigma Chi Fraternity was founded in 1855 when twelve members of the Miami University chapter of DKE (Kappa Chapter) split evenly over a debate on the office of Poet in the Erodelphian Literary Society. The six Deke members who rescinded their membership and later founded Sigma Chi were: Thomas Cowan Bell, James Parks Caldwell, Daniel William Cooper, Isaac M. Jordan, Benjamin Piatt Runkle, and Franklin Howard Scobey. Frank Baird, a Delta Kappa Epsilon, had a hand in creating the Sigma Chi "White Cross" badge along with Runkle and Sigma Chi's seventh founder William Lewis Lockwood. He was known as an artist on campus and sympathized with his former Deke brothers.

Reportedly, the past president of Yale's DKE chapter is guaranteed to be one of the 15 juniors tapped to form the Yale's Skull and Bones senior secret society.

[edit] Famous Alumni

Presidents of the United States

  • 19th President, Rutherford B. Hayes, Delta Chi
  • 26th President, Theodore Roosevelt, Alpha
  • 32nd President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Alpha (FDR was a member of a DKE Chapter, Alpha at Harvard, that had been suspended for conflict with the international organization several years before (in essence a loosely affiliated organization known as the "Dicky Club"). FDR was also a member of Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. Alpha Delta Phi was older and considered more prestigious at the time. For this reason he is not normally numbered among the Presidents who were Dekes.)
  • 38th President, Gerald R. Ford, Omicron
  • 41st President, George H. W. Bush, Phi
  • 43rd President, George W. Bush, Phi

Vice Presidents of the United States

Sitting state governors

Newspaper publishers and editors

Justices of the United States Supreme Court

Agency Heads

Businessmen

Famous political figures

Sports and entertainment

Other famous Dekes

  • Alan Bean, Omega Chi - Apollo astronaut
  • Edward Bellamy, Theta Chi - author
  • Melvil Dewey, Sigma - devised the Dewey Decimal System
  • Charles A. Ellis, Gamma Phi - designed the Golden Gate Bridge
  • Robert E. Peary, Theta - first man to reach the North Pole
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne, Theta - author
  • Yuan Shikai - Phi Prime Minister, Chinese (Qing Dynast) Empire
  • Chung Mun Yew - Phi Director of Chinese Railroads
  • Liang Tun Yen - Phi Secretary of State, Chinese (Qing Dynasty) Empire
  • Baron Seijiro Hirai, Psi Omega - President, Japanese Railways
  • Viscount Sutemi Chinda, Psi Phi - Secretary of State of the Empire of Japan (The Washington DC Cherry trees were presented by him and his wife on behalf of the people of Japan in 1912)

For a more complete listing of prominent Dekes visit: Prominent Alumni

[edit] Active Chapters

1) Phi - Yale

2) Zeta[1] - Princeton

3) Sigma - Amherst

4) Gamma[2] - Vanderbilt

5) Psi - Alabama

6) Chi - Mississippi

7) Beta - UNC-CH

8) Kappa - Miami

9) Lambda[3] - Kenyon

10) Eta[4] - Virginia

11) Alpha Alpha - Middlebury

12) Omicron[5] - Michigan

13) Rho[6] - Lafayette

14) Tau - Hamilton

17) Beta Phi[7] - Rochester

18) Zeta Zeta - LSU

19) Phi Chi - Rutgers

20) Gamma Phi[8] - Wesleyan

21) Beta Chi[9] - Case Western Reserve

22) Delta Chi[10] - Cornell

23) Delta Delta[11] - Chicago

24) Phi Gamma[12] - Syracuse

25) Theta Zeta - Berkeley

26) Phi Epsilon[13] - Minnesota

27) Sigma Tau - MIT

28) Theta Chi[14] - Union College

29) Tau Lambda - Tulane

30) Alpha Phi[15] - Toronto

31) Delta Kappa - Pennsylvania

32) Sigma Rho[16] - Stanford

33) Rho Delta - Wisconsin

34) Kappa Epsilon - Washington

35) Omega Chi[17] - Texas

36) Alpha Tau[18] - Manitoba

37) Theta Rho[19] - UCLA

38) Delta Phi[20] - Alberta

39) Phi Alpha[21] - British Columbia

40) Tau Delta - Sewanee

41) Psi Delta[22] - Wake Forest University

42) Sigma Alpha[23] - Virginia Tech

43) Phi Delta[24] - Western Ontario

44) Alpha Mu - Rowan

45) Epsilon Rho[25] - Duke

46) Nu Zeta[26] - Pace

47) Zeta Upsilon[27] - UC, Davis

48) Phi Sigma - Bryant

49) Phi Rho[28] - Penn State

50) Chi Rho[29] - Bloomsburg

51) Zeta Chi[30] - Bentley

52) Sigma Beta - UC, Santa Barbara

53) Beta Gamma[31] - NYU

54) Alpha Beta - DePaul

55) Sigma Kappa - Michigan State

56) Delta Tau - Ohio State

57) Delta Psi[32] - Indiana

58) Mu Chi - Maryville

59) Upsilon Omega - South Alabama

60) Kappa Omega - Lake Forest

61) Rho Beta[33] - Richmond

63) Phi Beta - Stephen F. Austin

For a complete list of all historical chapters, see DKE's Chapter Website.

[edit] External links and references


Fraternity Leadership Association
Delta Kappa Epsilon | Kappa Sigma | Phi Sigma Kappa | Sigma Alpha Epsilon | Sigma Lambda Beta | Sigma Pi
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