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It all started in Room 47 West Range when Frederick Southgate Taylor turned to Littleton Waller Tazewell, his cousin and roommate, for help in starting a new fraternity. Also present was James Benjamin Sclater, Jr., a schoolmate of Tazewell, and Sclater's roommate Robertson Howard. Those four men voted to add a fifth to their group and chose Julian Edward Wood. Although history is unclear, William Alexander, probably a friend of Sclater, Jr., was proposed for membership and was admitted as a founder. The first initiate was Augustus Washington Knox. |
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"For the establishment of friendship on a firmer and more
lasting basis; for the promotion of brotherly love and kind
feeling; for the mutual benefit and advancement of the interests
of those with whom we sympathize and deem worthy of our regard;
We have resolved to form a fraternity, believing that, thus we
can most successfully accomplish our object." Robertson Howard Julian Edward Wood James Benjamin Sclater, Jr. Frederick Southgate Taylor Littleton Waller Tazewell William Alexander |
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Nearly two years
later, the third chapter, Gamma (William & Mary), was
established. During the years that followed until 1889, there
would be a total of ten charters granted; however, only five
remained active. This was the year of a most important
convention. The Hampden-Sydney Convention brought the likes of
Theron Hall Rice, a transfer to Virginia from Southwestern, who
represented Alpha; Howard Bell Arbuckle, a recent graduate and
then a teaching fellow at Hampden-Sydney, who represented Iota;
and John Shaw Foster, a delegate from Theta Chapter at
Southwestern (now Rhodes College). Lambda at the Citadel was to
have been represented by Robert Adger Smythe, but a telegram
from Charleston explained, "no holiday given us. Impossible to
come. Act for us in everything." This convention is of major
importance, as it is considered the rebirth of the Fraternity.
Together, Theron Rice, Howard Arbuckle, Robert Smythe, and John
Foster came to be known as the Junior Founders.
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