Alpha Delta (national) explained

Alpha Delta
Letters:Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΑΔ
Crest:Alpha Delta National Fraternity Crest.gif
Alt:The official coat of arms of Alpha Delta National Fraternity
Affiliation:Independent
Status:Active
Type:Social
Motto:"In Brotherhood We Stand, In Service We Rise."
Colors: Forest green, Old gold, and Onyx black
Birthplace:Henley Park Hotel
Washington, D.C.
Flower:Daffodil
Jewel:Onyx
Symbol:Great horned owl
Scope:Regional
Chapters:6 active
Free Label:Predecessor
Free:Alpha Phi Omega
City:Orono
State:Maine
Country:United States
Tree:Giant sequoia
Pillars:Leadership, Brotherhood, and Service

Alpha Delta (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΑΔ), commonly known as AD, is a college fraternity with six active chapters in the United States. Alpha Delta was formed on August 4, 2007, by former Alpha Phi Omega chapters that chose to maintain all-male membership after that organization became coeducational.[1]

History

Alpha Phi Omega

Before the formation of Alpha Delta, Alpha Phi Omega was founded at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania in 1925 as a fraternal parallel to the Boy Scouts of America. This organization would go on to become one of the largest all-male, Greek-lettered college organizations in the United States, expanding to over 500 colleges and universities nationwide.

In 1972 the United States passed the Title IX educational amendments, which in effect mandated that single-sex collegiate professional and community service organizations must become coeducational, although social fraternities and sororities, as well as sex-specific youth clubs such the Boy Scouts, were specifically exempt. At the time, Alpha Phi Omega was an all-male national service fraternity and it was not clear if the amendment applied to the organization.

At the 1976 national convention of Alpha Phi Omega, the fraternity voted to become coeducational in compliance with these new university rules and regulations. Several chapters threatened to disassociate with the organization if they were forced to go coeducational, so a "gentleman's agreement" was made where the national organization would not require existing chapters to admit women as members, but all new chapters to the fraternity would.

Over the following 30 years, many legislative attempts were made internally within Alpha Phi Omega to clarify national membership standards over a chapter's right to remain single-sex. In July 2005, a Board of Directors Resolution was adopted clarifying the National Fraternity's membership policies by mandating coeducational membership. The resolution was upheld at the 2006 Alpha Phi Omega National Convention in Louisville, Kentucky. Per this resolution, the all-male chapters would be required to comply with the mandate or lose national organizational recognition.

Alpha Delta

A meeting was convened by the all-male chapters at a hotel conference room in Louisville, where the Sigma Xi chapter at the University of Maine, the Zeta Theta chapter of Drexel University, and the Pi Chi chapter of Duquesne University decided to disassociate themselves from the national organization and establish a new fraternity, Alpha Delta National Fraternity. This fraternity was later joined with the other all-male chapters, the Psi Delta chapter at the University of Maine at Machias and the Nu Mu chapter at the University of Minnesota at Duluth.

The Alpha Delta National Fraternity was officially founded on August 14, 2007, at the Henley Park Hotel in Washington, D.C., with fourteen men representing four of the all-male chapters present. The group adopted the Washington Convention Mission Statement, and Alpha Delta was tentatively agreed to be the acting name of the new organization. Later conventions on November 17, 2007, in Boston, Massachusetts, and on January 25, 2008, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, established the new national organization's ritual, constitution, bylaws, symbolism, colors, and coat of arms. Its coat of arms was redesigned by Jessica Lewis, a friend of the Zeta Theta chapter at Drexel University, and subsequently redesigned a second time by Bart Brizee of the Sigma Xi Chapter at the University of Maine.

The purpose of Alpha Delta is to assemble college men in a national fraternal order as envisioned by its spiritual founder Frank Reed Horton and the Boy Scouts of America. This fraternity is dedicated to developing leadership by providing service, forging the bonds of brotherhood regardless of race, creed, or background, and developing an understanding that service to mankind is not only an obligation but a higher calling.[2]

Symbols

Alpha Delta's motto is "In Brotherhood We Stand, In Service We Rise". Its cardinal principles or pillars are Leadership, Brotherhood, and Service.[3]

The fraternity's colors are forest green, old gold, and onyx black. Its flower is the daffodil. Its tree is the giant sequoia. ts jewel is onyx. Its symbol is the great horned owl.

Chapters

In the following list, active chapters are indicated in bold, and inactive chapters are in italics. Chapters use their charter dates from the predecessor institution.

ChapterCharter date and rangeInstitutionLocationStatusReferences
Alpha Beta Indiana University of PennsylvaniaIndiana, PennsylvaniaInactive
Alpha GammaAlcorn State UniversityLorman, MississippiActive
Zeta ThetaMay 16, 1948Drexel UniversityPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaActive[4]
Nu MuMay 25, 1961University of Minnesota DuluthDuluth, MinnesotaActive
Pi Chi May 15, 1966Duquesne UniversityPittsburgh, PennsylvaniaActive[5]
Sigma Xi May 15, 1967Orono, MaineActive[6]
Psi DeltaMay 14, 1972)University of Maine at MachiasMachias, MaineActive

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alpha Delta . 2011-02-11 . Greek Life . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100623105949/http://www.duq.edu/greek-life/chapters/ad.cfm . June 23, 2010 .
  2. Web site: The University of Maine - Alpha Delta National Fraternity - National Information . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150120232716/http://umaine.edu/alphadelta/fraternity-information/national-information/ . 20 January 2015 . 20 January 2015 . Umaine.edu.
  3. Web site: Alpha Delta Pi Chi Chapter . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120423070509/http://www.duqalphadelta.com/pichi.html . April 23, 2012 . 2011-02-11 . Pi Chi Chapter Site . Duquesne University.
  4. Alpha Phi Omega History Book (1925-1993) "Our Chapters" pp 185-205
  5. Web site: Fraternities . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150120222419/http://www.duq.edu/life-at-duquesne/student-organizations/greek-life/greek-chapters/fraternities . 20 January 2015 . 20 January 2015 . Duq.edu . dmy-all.
  6. Web site: The University of Maine - Alpha Delta National Fraternity . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150120203255/http://umaine.edu/alphadelta/ . 20 January 2015 . 20 January 2015 . Umaine.edu.