| Sigma Nu's
past is a proud and colorful one. Founded by
three cadets at the Virginia Military
Institute in a period of civil strife known
as the Reconstruction, Sigma Nu represented
a radical departure from the times. The
system of physical abuse and hazing of
underclassmen at VMI led to James Frank
Hopkins, Greenfield Quarles, and James
McIlvaine Riley to form the "Legion of
Honor" which soon became Sigma Nu
Fraternity. So, amidst a backdrop of
turmoil, North America's first "Honor"
fraternity was established.
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THE FOUNDERS
The story of Sigma Nu began during the
period following the Civil War, when a
Confederate veteran from Arkansas enrolled
at the Virginia Military Institute in
Lexington Virginia. That cadet was James
Frank Hopkins, and it is to him and two of
his classmates that Sigma Nu owes its
existence. When Hopkins enrolled at VMI, the
south was in a state of turmoil and just
beginning to recover from the devastating
military defeat it had suffered. The
Virginia Military Institute was highly
recognized for its civil engineering program
and the South badly needed to repair its
bridges and railroads. At the Institute
cadets suffered, not only of the ravages of
war and a disrupted homelife, but because of
the system of physical harassment imposed on
lower classmen by their fellow students in
the upper classes.
Hopkins had experienced military
subservience during the war, and was willing
to tolerate a reasonable amount of
constraint intended to induce discipline.
However, Hopkins was unwilling to accept any
amount of hazing then being allowed at VMI.
Not one ounce of hazing was he willing to
suffer and he was doggedly adamant about
eliminating it.
Hopkins soon was joined by two classmates
and close friends who were also equally
unhappy with the hazing situation. They were
Greenfield Quarles, from Arkansas, a
Kentuckian by birth, and James McIlvaine
Riley from St. Louis, Missouri. These three
men began a movement to completely abolish
the hazing system at VMI. Their efforts
climaxed on a moonlit October night in 1868,
presumably following Bible study at the
superintendent's home, when the three met at
a limestone outcropping on the edge of the
VMI parade ground. Hopkins, Quarles and
Riley clasped hands on the Bible and gave
their solemn pledge to form a brotherhood of
a new society they called the Legion of
Honor.
The vows taken by these three Founders bound
them together to oppose hazing at VMI and
encouraged the application of the Principle
of Honor in all their relationships. That
the founders should adopt Honor as a guiding
principle was a natural move since a rigid
code of Honor was already an established
tradition of the VMI Corps of Cadets. The
Honor system at VMI required each cadet to
conform to the duty imposed by his
conscience that each act be governed by a
high sense of Honor.
SIGMA NU ANNOUNCED
Although Sigma Nu Fraternity began in
October 1868 as the Legion of Honor, its
existence was kept secret until the founders
publicly announced their new society on the
first day of January 1869, the accepted
birthdate of Sigma Nu. What a New Year's
celebration it must have been for cadets who
could not go home for the holidays! In those
days the Institute did not close for
"breaks" as we know them. It suspended
classes only for the day on such occasions
as Christmas and New Year's.
The Fraternity's spiritual birth, however,
actually occurred in 1866, the year the
Founders entered VMI, when Frank Hopkins
first rebelled against hazing at the
Institute. Still, the Founders did not
create Sigma Nu with any feeling of
animosity toward others; rather they were
prompted by the impulses of sympathy and
affection for all people which underlie
abiding peace and contentment. They had
experienced enough hate and destruction all
during and after the War. They wanted to end
all abuses, and they knew it would not come
easily. It was never an issue of who won or
lost the War. It was only an issue of
winning the peace. The Legion of Honor
society in its first year assumed the
outward aspects of a college Greek-letter
organization. The organization kept its
original name secret but was recognized
publicly as Sigma Nu Fraternity. It was soon
to win the respect of all.
The new Fraternity needed an identifying
symbol, and Founder Hopkins designed a Badge
for the members to wear on their uniforms.
That Badge was patterned after the White
Cross of the French Legion of Honor, which
was worn on the uniform of a favorite
professor of Hopkins. The Badge was first
introduced in the spring of 1869. Keeping
with the Founders' decree, the Badge has
remained unchanged ever since, except in
size and the raised center. Even today, the
collegiate Commander's Badge, and the Badge
of the Grand Officers remain identical to
Hopkins' original Badge. When the first
slate of Officers was chosen, Riley, the
most popular, was elected Commander and
Hopkins the Lieutenant Commander. Typically,
Hopkins, the epitome of humbleness, was
delighted that "Mac" Riley was chosen
leader. It gave Hopkins "the doer," thinker,
planner, along with Quarles who had similar
talent, more of an opportunity to
concentrate on solidifying ol' Alpha before
he graduated in 1870. By the 1869
commencement, the group had grown to
fifty-one members.
SIGMA NU EXPANDS
Expansion began for Sigma Nu in 1870 after
the graduation of the Founders, when the
mother chapter at VMI, then known as Chapter
I, approved the establishment of a chapter
at the University of Virginia. Later, a
permanent numbering system established a
Greek-letter designation for chapters. Thus,
Chapter I became Alpha and the University of
Virginia chapter became Beta.
Sigma Nu established a chapter at North
Georgia Agricultural College in 1881. One of
the men instrumental in the chartering of
the North Georgia chapter was John Alexander
Howard. He was blessed with rare intellect
and considerable talent for writing. That
talent led him naturally to newspaper work.
Howard read widely and in his reading
discovered Baird's Manual of American
College Fraternities. He read that book
until he was familiar with all national
fraternities. His study of other
fraternities prompted him to examine
shortcomings of his own fledgling
Fraternity. At this time Sigma Nu was still
using the Roman numeral designation for
chapters. Howard felt that the Fraternity
should adopt a Greek-letter designation
according to the founding date of the
chapter. Thus, his own chapter at North
Georgia became Kappa. Howard's main
contribution was the founding of The Delta,
the Fraternity's renowned magazine. He
selected The Delta for the magazine's title
to symbolize the geographic relationship of
the three existing chapters of the
Fraternity at that time, Alpha, Lambda and
Kappa. The first edition of The Delta was
published in April 1883 and contained
sixteen pages.
FIRST NATIONAL CONVENTION
The year following the publication of The
Delta witnessed another important milestone
for Sigma Nu. That event was the First
National Convention, which met at the
Maxwell House Hotel in Nashville, Tennessee,
July 9-10, 1884. The person responsible for
the First National Convention was Isaac P.
Robinson (Lambda, Washington and Lee).
Robinson felt that a meeting of alumni and
collegiate representatives was imperative
because of a need to update the
constitution, revise procedures and
coordinate efforts. The Sigma Nu convention
later became known as Grand Chapter. It is
held every two years and serves as the
legislative body of the General Fraternity.
Another event in 1884 which had a major
impact upon the Fraternity was the
establishment of Nu Chapter at the
University of Kansas. During the first
fifteen years of its existence, Sigma Nu was
primarily a southern fraternity, and the
decision to establish Nu Chapter was to be
the first step in a radical expansion
program. Nu chapter was to open the West and
North for Sigma Nu. Eugene L. Alford of
Lambda was instrumental in the founding of
Nu Chapter.
Two charter initiates of Nu who became very
influential in Sigma Nu in later years were
Perlee Rawson Bennett and Grant Woodbury
Harrington. Bennett served the Fraternity as
Grand Recorder for many years and in 1890
was elected Regent. He presided over the
Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and Tenth Grand
Chapters. Harrington became editor of The
Delta and Grand Recorder. For eight years
(1886-1894) he had almost total
responsibility for the administration of the
Fraternity. Other early members of Nu
Chapter were the Sears brothers, William H.
Sears, Clarence H. Sears and Walter James
Sears, who also became influential in Sigma
Nu affairs. Their brother, Lorin Beecher
Sears, attended Ohio State University where
no chapter of Sigma Nu existed at the time.
Walter was so interested in having Lorin
initiated into the Fraternity that he
entered Ohio State University, founded Beta
Nu and became its first initiate; Lorin
became its second. Walter Sears devoted much
of his lifetime to Sigma Nu, but his name
will be remembered best for his beautiful
prose work, "The Creed of Sigma Nu."
THE MOVE WEST
Leland Stanford University opened in 1891.
Among its first students was Carl Lane
Clemans, who had founded Chi Chapter at
Cornell College in Iowa. Clemans was
determined to open a chapter on the West
Coast, and he recruited enough men to
charter Beta Chi Chapter at Stanford in
November 1891. Beta Chi's fame soon spread
to Berkeley, and Clemans went there to help
organize Beta Psi in February 1892.
Sigma Nu opened the Northwest to Greek
letter organizations when Gamma Chi was
chartered at the University of Washington in
1895, earning the Fraternity kudos
throughout the Greek community for its
"Northwest conquest." For almost four years
Sigma Nu was the only college fraternity in
the Northwest, having been the first to
establish a chapter not only in the State of
Washington, but also Montana and Oregon.
Beta Iota at Mount Union was chartered by
Walter James Sears in 1892. Three years
later Beta Iota initiated Albert Hughes
Wilson, to whom Sigma Nu owes a great debt.
"Bert" Wilson served as Regent, but his most
noteworthy achievement was in expansion.
Wilson established more chapters than any
other member of the Fraternity, thirty-two
in all, and he is generally credited with
helping develop Sigma Nu into a
geographically representative organization.
Brother Wilson was the exemplar of
interfraternity spirit as well, being
chiefly responsible for the founding of
Alpha Sigma Phi men's fraternity. As an
aside, it should be noted that Brother
Wilson C. Morris (Beta Iota, Mt. Union) is
given credit by Sigma Tau Gamma men's
fraternity as being the driving force behind
its founding while the collegiate Brothers
of Delta Theta Chapter, Lombard (Knox)
College assisted greatly with the founding
of Alpha Xi Delta women's fraternity.
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HEADQUARTERS ESTABLISHED
Having active chapters in each section of
the country, Sigma Nu was now in every sense
a national fraternity. Expansion proceeded
at an orderly rate, and by 1915 there was a
need for centrally located administrative
offices with full-time officers. Heretofore,
the various Sigma Nu officers maintained
their files and records at their own homes
or places of business. Fire had once
destroyed many of the Fraternity's records,
and there was a lack of coordination in
general.
Following the Denver Grand Chapter in 1915,
the High Council approved the establishment
of the central administrative system first
proposed by Regent Francis V. Keesling (Beta
Chi, Stanford). The plan, adapted by Walter
J. Sears, converted the High Council into a
board of directors elected by the Grand
Chapter; all executive and administrative
duties previously exercised by members of
the High Council and committees were lodged
in a single official - the General Secretary
(now Executive Director) - appointed by the
High Council and subordinate to its
direction.
Indianapolis was selected as the location of
the Fraternity's headquarters, and on
November 1, 1915 the General Offices were
opened there temporarily in the Lemcke Annex
before moving into the main building. Bixby
Willis (Lambda, Washington and Lee), a past
Grand Treasurer of Sigma Nu, was employed as
the first General Secretary. In 1926 the
central office was moved to the Illinois
Building in Indianapolis.
Indianapolis served as the Fraternity's
headquarters for forty-two years, during
which time fifty-five new chapters were
added to the roster of the Legion of Honor.
FOUNDERS JOIN CHAPTER ETERNAL
Founder James Riley, who had served ten
years (1869-79) as the Fraternity's first
Regent, entered the Chapter Eternal on May
6, 1911, in St. Louis, Missouri. Members of
the Fraternity carried his remains to a
burial plot purchased in Bellefontaine
Cemetery by the St. Louis Alumni Chapter in
fraternal affection for the Founder.
The life of James Frank Hopkins ended on
December 15, 1913, and he was laid to rest
in the village cemetery at Mablevale,
Arkansas, beside his sweetheart from cadet
days and devoted wife, a native Lexingtonian,
Jennie Barclay Hopkins. In 1920 an
impressive memorial was dedicated at the
gravesite. Greenfield Quarles, the only
Founder still living, offered a tribute to
Alpha 1:
The love of our Brother for his fellow man
was only excelled by his love of God. His
example has instilled into the hearts of us
all the principles which guide us now, and
these principles will go down in future
generations for all time. His life has been
an inspiration to all youth. All that was
mortal of Brother Hopkins lies buried here;
but his immortal spirit will live forever.
Six months later, the last of the three
Founders was taken from living contact with
the Fraternity. Judge Greenfield Quarles
entered the Chapter Eternal at his home in
Helena, Arkansas, January 14, 1921. He had
lived a life of noble service.
EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION
In 1945, Brother William P. Yates (Beta Rho,
Pennsylvania), inspired the formation of the
"Sigma Nu Inc., Educational Foundation" with
a handsome bequest. Its name was changed in
recent times to the "Sigma Nu Educational
Foundation, Inc." The foundation has been
instrumental in assisting collegiate members
with financial aid supplements, and the
General Fraternity in the development of the
LEAD Program, (LEAD is an acronym for
leadership, ethics, achievement,
development). The Foundation continues to
support the exclusively educational programs
of the Fraternity.
RETURN TO LEXINGTON
Even before Sigma Nu's first central office
was organized in Indianapolis, some dreamed
of the day when the Fraternity would have an
appropriate shrine at Sigma Nu's birthplace,
but it took nearly four decades before the
first step was taken. That step was the
appointment of a Headquarters Committee in
1954. It compared rent with ownership and
ultimately recommended the latter in a
college town where a Sigma Nu chapter
thrived. Inevitably Sigma Nu history and
tradition pointed to Lexington.
Regent James W. Bradley (Epsilon Epsilon,
Oklahoma State) and his High Council took
the historic step in 1957, purchasing
without mortgage or lien a singularly
appropriate property, a large, a large home
ideally suited for conversion and
development. The land, conveniently located
on the highest hill in the corporate limits
of Lexington, Virginia, and on a
seven-and-one-half-acre tract overlooking
VMI and Washington and Lee University,
enjoys the Blue Ridge Mountains as a
backdrop to the east and the Allegheny
Mountains to the west. The land was
originally owned by the son of General
Frances H. Smith, the first superintendent
of VMI, who inspired Hopkins in the founding
of Sigma Nu; the house, built by the
grandson of Superintendent Smith, came to
Sigma Nu directly from the Smith family.
Milton L. Grigg, a renowned Virginia
architect and participant in the famous
Williamsburg Restoration, was contracted to
restore the building. The Headquarters
facility was occupied in 1958 and officially
dedicated June 9, 1960.
SIGMA NU CENTENNIAL
On January 1, 1969, Sigma Nu reached its
one-hundred-year milestone. In the year that
followed, it marked that event with a series
of Centennial dinners at 36 locations
throughout the country and with pilgrimages
to the gravesites of the three Founders and
the first editor of The Delta. Then on
Sunday, June 15, a Centennial Convocation
was held in Lexington. Two beautiful new
wings of the Headquarters building were
dedicated, one housing the Sigma Nu Museum
and the other the Fraternity's Honor
Library, later to be dedicated in tribute to
former Executive Secretary Richard R. "Dick"
Fletcher, who had long since earned the
moniker "Mr. Sigma Nu."
Sigma Nu in its 100th year had come a long
way from its founding. At the century mark
it had issued 164 charters of which 143
chapters were alive and flourishing. Of the
nine other truly national fraternities older
than Sigma Nu, only three had more
initiates. Sigma Nu owned 110 chapter houses
providing living accommodations for more
than 3,500 students. All this had been
accomplished solely through the appeal of
its principles - without false claims or
specious promises, without merger, without
honorary members. Every chapter had earned
its own way by applying integrity in both
purpose and method.
SIGMA NU CELEBRATES ITS 125TH YEAR
Well into the Fraternity's second century,
Sigma Nu continued its dramatic growth.
Today, the number of initiates is nearly
200,000; the number of chapters approaching
250. Many of the Fraternity's chapters have
initiated more than a 1,000 members, with a
large number topping 1,500 and several
exceeding 2,000.
Among the many significant achievements
during the past decade has been the addition
of adjacent properties in Lexington,
Virginia, known as the Ethical Leadership
Center, owned by the Sigma Nu Educational
Foundation, Inc. Particularly noteworthy is
Sigma Nu's interfraternity leadership in
risk reduction and risk management matters
followed by the introduction of its unique
LEAD Program, one of the most meaningful
educational initiatives ever undertaken by a
college fraternity. In addition, the
transfer of ownership of the Fraternity's
Headquarters property, known as the Sigma Nu
Headquarters Shrine, to the Sigma Nu
Educational Foundation, Inc. has enabled
alumni gifts to assist in its restoration
and preservation, so as to relieve the
burden of upkeep on future generations of
collegians.
Finally, in celebration of the Fraternity's
125th anniversary, the Foundation undertook
construction of a third wing to the
Headquarters Shrine as well as a Pathway of
Honor of engraved bricks, which provides an
opportunity to celebrate the life of each
Sigma Nu. The Pathway of Honor will meander
throughout the Lexington properties. A
special "Pilgrimage to the Rock" was one of
the memorable highlights of the 56th Grand
Chapter held in Washington, DC, in August
1994.
For a century and a quarter Sigma Nu
chapters have shaped the man of integrity.
Their challenge for the future is to focus
efforts and energies anew to the fuller
realization of the great mission set by our
Founders - to build Men of Honor, ethical
leaders for society based upon the concept
of the Brotherhood of Man under the
Fatherhood of God. Indeed, Sigma Nu may be
on the threshold of the era of its greatest
achievement as it enters the 21st Century.
ENJOY
SOME TRADITIONAL SIGMA NU MUSIC
Fraternity Man
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Fraternity Man MP3 here
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Sigma Nu Girl
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Sigma Nu Girl MP3 here
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White Star of Sigma Nu
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