Delphic Fraternity

1

The Delphic Fraternity, Inc., also known as Delphic of Gamma Sigma Tau (ΓΣΤ), is an American multicultural fraternity. It was originally founded in New York State in 1871 as a literary society and was re-established in 1987 as a multicultural fraternity. It was a founding member of the National Multicultural Greek Council.

History

The Delphic Society was founded on October 13, 1871, at the Geneseo Normal and Training School (SUNY Geneseo) in upstate New York. It was a literary debating society. It was a successor organization to the Delphic Society at Rochester, which had been active until at least December 1866. Its founders were: • John Beach Abbott • Charles W. Barney • Lewis E. Coe • John N. Drake • William S. Janes • William S. Kershner • Scott L. McNinch • James M. Milne • Loring Olmsted • Frank E. Welles • Charles S. Wilbur • Ara Wilkinson • Frank A. Winnie With affiliations at other schools, the college literary society at Geneseo became known as the Delphic Fraternity. Delphic eventually became a regional fraternity with chapters at Oneonta, Jamaica, Cortland, New Paltz, Plattsburgh, and Potsdam, New York, and Mansfield, Pennsylvania. The oldest chapter, at SUNY Cortland, traces its formation back to the Cortland Academy Debating Club in 1842. By the late 1930s, only the Zeta chapter at the State Teachers College at New Paltz (SUNY New Paltz) remained active. In the early 1950s, the chapter became briefly associated with Sigma Tau Gamma, a larger national fraternity. In 1962, the organization became a legal not-for-profit membership entity by incorporating in the state of New York as the Delphic Fraternity of New Paltz, Inc. After fifteen years of dormancy, the fraternity was re-established as Delphic of Gamma Sigma Tau at SUNY New Paltz on March 11, 1987. It reformed as a multicultural fraternity. The fraternity recognizes the brothers who reestablished the fraternity as its second set of founders, including: • Steve Carle • Jose Carrion • Gil DeLeon • Emanuel Egipciaco • Ventura Lopez • Michael Rand • Steve Rappleyea • Todd Reed • Eugenio Rodriguez • Edwin Ruiz • Jeff Seoul • Lawrence Troutman Delphic of Gamma Sigma Tau Fraternity became a founding member of the National Multicultural Greek Council in 1998. In 2003, the Theta chapter at Binghamton University was founded, becoming the first Delphic chapter established in the 21st century. In 2009, the first Delphic chapter outside of the northeast region was chartered at the University of Virginia. Known as the Kappa chapter of Delphic, this chapter is also the first multicultural fraternity established at UVA. The Delphic Fraternity, Inc. has chartered fourteen chapters. As of 2024, it has one active undergraduate chapter and three active graduate chapters. Its national philanthropy is the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

Symbols

The Delphic Fraternity was named for Delphi, Greece. The fraternity's motto is "Friendship, Fellowship, and Fidelity." Its maxim is "Unity AmonGST All." Its colors are red, white, and royal blue. The fraternity's flowers are the white rose and the red dahlia. Its jewel is the ruby. Its mascot is the dragon. Its nickname is the Delphics.

Chapters

Collegiate chapters

In the following list of undergraduate chapters, active chapters are indicated in bold and inactive chapters and institutions are in italics.

Graduate chapters

In the following list of graduate chapters, active chapters are indicated in bold and inactive chapters are in italics.

Notable members

This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.

Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the Wikimedia Foundation.

View original