Phi Lambda Alpha

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Phi Lambda Alpha
ΦΛΑ
Flacrest.png
Founded1919; 102 years ago (1919)
University of California, Berkeley
TypeSocial
ScopeNational
MottoSemper Parati
Semper Juncti
HeadquartersBerkeley, California
United States

Phi Lambda Alpha (ΦΛΑ), established 1919 at the University of California, Berkeley[1] was the first Latin American–based Greek Lettered collegiate fraternity in the Western United States.

Phi Lambda Alpha (ΦΛΑ) fraternity established communications with Pi Delta Phi, which had been recently founded in 1916 in the Northeastern United States, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). After some communication, these two organizations realized the existence of a non-Greek letter secret society, the Union Hispano Americana (UHA). As a result of intensive correspondence and various interviews, the three organizations merged. In their merger agreement, the three organizations adopted the name of Phi Lambda Alpha Fraternity, with the distinctive emblem & constitution of Pi Delta Phi, and the goals & motto of the UHA. This new union was formalized on June 11, 1921, in the City of New York.

After ΦΛΑ was organized, other societies joined it: the "Club Latino-Americano" founded in 1919 at Colorado School of Mines; the "Federación Latino-Americana" founded in 1926 at Columbia University which joined in 1928; the "Club Hispania" founded in 1929 of Cornell University which joined in 1931; the "Club Hispano-Americano" founded in 1921 of Tri State College in Angola which joined in 1929 and the Alfa Tenoxtitlan Militant chapter founded in 1929 made up of members of the old ΦΛΑ in Mexico.[2]

On December 26, 1931, Phi Lambda Alpha Fraternity merged with Sigma Iota fraternity to form Phi Iota Alpha. Phi Sigma Alpha fraternity can also trace its roots back to ΦΛΑ.

Former Chapters[]

Collegiate Institution Establishment Year US State
University of California, Berkeley 1919 California
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) 1921 Massachusetts
Colorado School of Mines 1927 Colorado
Columbia University 1928 New York
Cornell University 1929 New York
Tri-State University 1931 Indiana

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ University of California Berkeley Blue & Gold Yearbook. Berkeley, California: University of California Berkeley. 1922. p. 600.
  2. ^ "Sigma History" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2008-05-01.
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