In what is believed to be record
time, the men of Monmouth College’s Illinois Gamma chapter of Phi Delta
Theta have received their charter from the national organization.
The members were initiated into the
fraternity at a private ceremony at the Stewart House on Nov. 14, and
their chartering ceremony was held the following day.
"Phi Delt headquarters and Monmouth
College have been so helpful," said chapter president Joe Moran, a
sophomore from Aurora, of the group’s rapid rise from special interest
group to chartered fraternity. "We are so proud to be a part of this
fraternity and the Monmouth College Greek system."
Last year, 18 students began
organizing a new fraternity chapter on campus. They assembled a group of
qualified potential members, prepared a mission statement and assigned
officers. One thing they didn’t do immediately, however, was decide
which national fraternity they would select. Four national fraternities,
each of which once had active chapters at Monmouth, visited campus last
fall to make presentations to the students and MC administration.
Phi Delta Theta, which previously
existed at Monmouth from 1871 to 1884, emerged as the clear choice to
become Monmouth’s fourth active fraternity. The chapter was officially
re-colonized in March and 36 charter members (including three students
who graduated last May) were initiated last weekend.
No matter which fraternity was
selected, it had already been determined by the students that it would
be alcohol-free. Phi Delta Theta prides itself on being the first male
Greek letter society to adopt alcohol-free housing. The students felt
that Phi Delta Theta exemplified everything they were looking for in a
fraternity, including a strong national organization and a major focus
on academics and leadership.
To be a member, Monmouth students
need to fulfill several expectations, including a minimum grade-point
average of 2.5, membership in another student organization and
completion of 16 hours of community service.
Already, the chapter reports the
highest GPA on campus among Greek organizations, and one-third of its
members are executive officers in campus organizations.
"We came together as fellow
students looking to better ourselves, and we now live as brothers
looking to better each other," said Anthony St. Clair, a sophomore from
Overland Park, Kansas, who serves as the chapter’s historian and
philanthropy chairman.
Phi Delta Theta began in 1848 at
Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. It was founded on the three cardinal
principles of friendship, sound learning and rectitude. Its mission
statement elaborates on those principles, stating that the fraternity
was organized for the cultivation of friendship among its members, the
acquirement individually of a high degree of mental culture and the
attainment personally of a high standard of morality.
Also known as Phi Delt, the
fraternity has initiated more than 228,000 members in its 160-year
history. It currently has 160 chapters, with more than one-fifth of that
total being added since 2000. Seven of its chapters are in Illinois,
including the Delta-Zeta chapter at Knox College, and nearly 1,000 of
the fraternity’s alumni live within a 100-mile radius of Monmouth. Among
its most famous alumni are President Benjamin Harrison, Lou Gehrig,
Frank Lloyd Wright and Neil Armstrong.
In addition to its alcohol-free
policy, Phi Delta Theta has also implemented an anti-hazing campaign and
is involved in several philanthropic endeavors, including support of
research on ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease.
While Phi Delta Theta has a long
and impressive history, so does the Greek system at Monmouth. Two
national women’s fraternities, Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Kappa Gamma,
originated at Monmouth College in 1867 and 1870, respectively, and
remain active. The addition of Phi Delta Theta