Theta Kappa Psi

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Theta Kappa Psi
ΘΚΨ
FoundedMay 30, 1879; 142 years ago (May 30, 1879)
Russell Military Academy in New Haven, Connecticut
TypeProfessional
AffiliationPFA (former)
Emphasismedical
Scopenational
PublicationThe Messenger
Headquarters515 Post Office St
Galveston, TX 77550-5501
USA

Theta Kappa Psi Medical Fraternity, Incorporated, (ΘΚΨ) is a defunct national professional medical fraternity. Currently, the Beta Phi chapter of Theta Kappa Psi in Galveston, Texas is restructuring the fraternity from its independent chapter.

History[]

Founding of Kappa Psi[]

The Society of Kappa Psi was founded on May 30, 1879 at the Russell Military Academy, a prep school in New Haven, Connecticut. The original founder was F. Harvey Smith. The second chapter was established at the Cheshire Military Academy in Cheshire, Connecticut on November 30, 1879. A third chapter was established at Hillhouse Academy in New Haven, Connecticut on October 7, 1894. All three prep school chapters had dissolved by the mid 1890s.

Kappa Psi was reorganized on November 18, 1898 at the School of Medicine at the University of Maryland. Leaders of this reorganization effort, now with a collegiate focus, were: William C. Bennett, Perry L. Boyer, William F. Clark, James E. Cathill, Edwin J. Frosher, Thompson D. Gilbert, J. Dawson Reeder, Press W. Ethridge, and F. Harvey Smith. Several of the members involved in the reorganization had been involved with one of the prior three Kappa Psi chapters. The reorganized Kappa Psi Fraternity was a joint medical-pharmaceutical fraternity, in which chapters would be chartered in both medical and pharmacy schools and colleges.[1]

The Fraternity absorbed the Alpha chapter of Delta Omicron Alpha medical fraternity on November 17, 1917, a stable chapter of a struggling small national. It had been founded at the college of medicine at Tulane University in 1907.[2][3]

The Fraternity absorbed the small national Phi Delta medical fraternity on January 26, 1918, bringing 11 active chapters at the time of the merger. It had been founded at the Long Island Hospital Medical College in 1901. Phi Delta's chapter roll included:[2][4]

Reorganization from Kappa Psi[]

At the 1924 Grand Council Convention of Kappa Psi, the decision was made to separate the fraternity into two separate entities: one fraternity for medicine and one fraternity for pharmacy. The split was effective on January 15, 1925. The pharmacy fraternity retained the Greek name Kappa Psi, and the medical fraternity became Theta Kappa Psi.[2]

Under their new names, the fraternities both maintain May 30, 1879 as their date of founding.

With the reorganization of the medical fraternity out of Kappa Psi in 1924, it was necessary to assume a new name, rewrite and adopt a new constitution, ritual, coat of arms, insignia, badge, and pledge button. The medical group assumed the name of Theta Kappa Psi Medical Fraternity, believing that the addition of the Greek letter Theta greatly enhanced its ritualistic significance. The new constitution bestowed the national president with the title of Grand Prytan, the national vice-president with the title of Grand Vice-Prytan, and the Grand Secretary and Treasurer with the title of Grand Recorder and Bursar. The name of the new medical fraternity journal was The Messenger. The badge and coat of arms were designed by Richard Bliss. The insignia and pledge button were designed by R.C. Williams.

When the division of the pharmacy and medical groups was declared effective, January 15, 1925, Theta Kappa Psi Medical Fraternity began its fresh endeavors with 32 chapters. Four of these 32 chapters included both medical and pharmacy students. Nine of its 32 chapters were inactive. Within a short time the revised Ritual and Constitution together with the necessary forms, records and updated charters were issued to the chapters of Theta Kappa Psi.

Following the reorganization it was necessary that the Fraternity be reincorporated. Incorporation papers were filed for Theta Kappa Psi by Dr. M.I. Samuels, Delta chapter, Wilmington, Delaware; Dr. C. J. Harbordt, Epsilon chapter, Dover, Delaware; and W.O. Klienstuber, Beta Eta chapter, Wilmington, Delaware, on May 6, 1926. The incorporation was completed May 7, 1926.

Initially, Theta Kappa Psi Medical Fraternity found progress to be very difficult since there were at least five strong national medical fraternities with which it had to compete. Also, many of the strong leaders of the old Kappa Psi Fraternity were associated with pharmacy schools. Their interest in the new pharmacy fraternity was a strong factor in the rapid development of Kappa Psi Pharmaceutical Fraternity.

The first officers of Theta Kappa Psi Medical Fraternity were:

Ralph C. Williams Grand Prytan Jabex H. Elliott Grand Vice-Prytan A. Richard Bliss, Jr. Grand Recorder and Bursar Victor J. Anderson Grand Registrar and Editor Thomas Benton Sellers Grand Counselor

Following the reorganization, Delta chapter struggled. The chapter depended upon transfers from other schools instead of working for themselves. The chapter also lacked leadership. It was necessary to withdraw the charter in 1930. Delta had furnished more Grand Officers than any other chapter and had always been the leader among chapters. This trend was to end abruptly..

Beta Kappa chapter at Duke University in 1932.

The zenith of Theta Kappa Psi Medical Fraternity was undoubtedly during the year 1933. The national officers were Grand Prytan R.C. Williams; Grand Vice-Prytan J.H. Elliott; and Grand Recorder and Bursar A.G. Engelbach. Through their staunch leadership the Fraternity was weathering the depression and had a peak strength of 35 collegiate chapters and 25 graduate chapters. The year ended with the international convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey, December 27–29, 1933. Following an exceptionally successful convention the delegates boarded their respective trains bound homeward, filled with enthusiasm for their Fraternity. Little did they realize that Theta Kappa Psi was destined never to reattain the heights it enjoyed those cold December days in Atlantic City in 1933.

Between 1935 and 1940, Theta Kappa Psi lost eleven chapters. By 1940, the Fraternity had dropped to sixth place among national medical fraternities in number of undergraduate chapters. The problems confronting Theta Kappa Psi were not unique, for two other national medical fraternities, Phi Alpha Sigma and Alpha Mu Pi Omega, disappeared during the period. When World War II ended in 1945, Theta Kappa Psi was composed of only twelve collegiate chapters.

In 1955, at long last, improvement came. The ever-present R.C. Williams chartered Mu Upsilon chapter in Miami, the first new collegiate chapter granted since 1944. Beta Epsilon chapter at Ohio State University was reactivated.

The apparent rebirth of Theta Kappa Psi, however, was short lived. By the Fall of 1959, Theta Kappa Psi's chapter roll had dropped to six. Several frustrated national officers began negotiations with representatives of Phi Beta Pi Medical Fraternity for a merger.

Merger with Phi Beta Pi[]

In 1961, Theta Kappa Psi merged to become part of Phi Beta Pi Medical Fraternity.

The last national convention of Theta Kappa Psi convened March 11, 1961 at the McAllister Hotel in Miami, Florida. During the meeting a motion was made to merge with Phi Beta Pi Medical Fraternity and the motion passed. Theta Kappa Psi Fraternity, as a distinct national entity, passed into history.

Theta Kappa Psi was officially invited to merge with Phi Beta Pi upon the condition that Theta Kappa Psi would surrender its name, rolls, and treasury to the national Phi Beta Pi office in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Chapters would be allowed to add the prefix Theta to their chapter designation. These conditions were accepted. Both fraternities were allowed to maintain certain of their original identification features.

The two Texas chapters of Theta Kappa Psi -- Beta Phi chapter in Galveston and Psi chapter in Dallas—could not accept the action. The thought of sacrificing the Fraternity's name, history, and tradition was considered untenable to them. In the wake of this disgruntlement, the two Texas Chapters and Gamma Tau chapter at the University of Manitoba wrote a new constitution and termed their seceding organization Theta Kappa Psi International Medical Fraternity. Legal action, however, threatened by Phi Beta Pi concerning the use of the name, caused no meetings [in support the possible schism] to be held after 1962.

The surviving chapters of Theta Kappa Psi followed diverse courses. Beta Epsilon chapter at Ohio State University continued as independent local fraternity until 1964 when poor finances caused it to fold. Psi chapter at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas pledged members up until 1968 as a local independent fraternity. Gamma Tau chapter at the University of Manitoba continued as an independent local fraternity until it became inactive in 1968. Beta Eta chapter at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia was an active chapter in Phi Beta Pi until 1966. At that time the chapter lost all formal structure when it allowed non-members to live in its fraternity house. In the 1960s Beta Phi chapter at the University of Texas Medical Branch, functioning as a local independent fraternity, emerged as the largest medical fraternity chapter in the nation with 130 members. The ritual, revised from the previous national initiation ceremony, was strictly followed. Gamma Kappa chapter at the Medical College of Georgia affiliated with Phi Beta Pi after the merger. This chapter was extremely successful in the 1960s building a new fraternity house in 1966. Although listed as a chapter of Phi Beta Pi, the group considered itself a member of Theta Kappa Psi.

In the Spring of 1992, the marriage of Phi Beta Pi-Theta Kappa Psi was dissolved. At the time of closing there were nine active chapters in existence. Of the 59 chapters installed by Theta Kappa Psi, Gamma Kappa chapter at the Medical College of Georgia was the last to remain active.

Chapters[]

This is a list of Theta Kappa Psi chapters. Chapter names, dates and schools taken from Baird's Manual, 20th Ed.[2]

Number Chapter Installation Date College or University Location Status
1. Alpha 1879 Grand Chapter Inactive [16]
2. Mu Sigma Alpha 1900 University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan Inactive (1940)
3. Delta 1898 University of Maryland, College Park College Park, Maryland Inactive (1931)
4. Beta 1900 Medical College of Virginia Richmond, Virginia Inactive
5. Chi 1901 University of Illinois Urbana, Illinois Inactive (1916)
6. Epsilon 1901 Maryland Medical College Baltimore, Maryland School closed in 1914
7. Phi Delta 1901 Long Island College of Medicine, now SUNY Brooklyn, New York Inactive (1950)
8. Zeta 1902 Georgetown University Washington, D.C. Inactive (1942)
9. Beta Epsilon 1903 Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio Inactive (1943-1960, 1964)
10. Beta Pi 1905 Sioux City Medical Sioux City, Iowa School discontinued in 1909)
11. Beta Xi 1905 University Medical Cornell? Ithaca, New York Inactive (1910)
12. Beta Zeta 1905 Washington University (MO) St. Louis, Missouri Inactive (1912)
13. Gamma 1905 Albany Medical College Albany, New York Inactive
14. Gamma Eta 1905 Michigan M & S Detroit, Michigan School discontinued in 1907 (merged into Saginaw Valley?)
15. Iota 1905 University of Alabama School of Medicine Tuscaloosa, Alabama Inactive, School moved from Mobile to Tuscaloosa in 1920
16. Kappa 1906 Birmingham Medical College Birmingham, Alabama School closed in 1913
17. Lambda 1907 Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tennessee Inactive (1919)
18. Nu 1907 Medical University of South Carolina Charleston, South Carolina Inactive
19. Kappa Phi 1908 University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota Inactive
20. Omicron 1908 University of Nashville Nashville, Tennessee School closed in 1911
21. Pi 1908 Tulane University New Orleans, Louisiana Inactive
22. Xi 1908 West Virginia University Morgantown, West Virginia Inactive
23. Rho 1909 Emory University Atlanta, Georgia Inactive (1953)
24. Sigma 1909 Baltimore P & S Baltimore, Maryland Merged with Univ of Maryland 1915
25. Tau 1909 University of Southern California[17] Los Angeles, California Inactive (1942)
26. Omega 1910 Southern Methodist University University Park, Texas School discontinued in 1915
27. Psi 1910 Southwestern Medical[18] Dallas, Texas Inactive
28. Beta Eta 1912 Jefferson Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Inactive (1966)
29. Beta Lambda 1913 George Washington University Washington, DC Inactive
30. Beta Mu 1913 University of Louisville Louisville, Kentucky Inactive
31. Beta Theta 1913 University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee Inactive (1943)
32. Upsilon 1915 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, North Carolina Inactive (1939)
33. Beta Rho 1917 Loyola University Chicago Chicago, Illinois Inactive
34. Beta Sigma 1917 Ft. Worth Medical Fort Worth, Texas School discontinued in 1918
35. Beta Tau 1917 Marquette University Milwaukee, Wisconsin Inactive (1924)
36. Beta Phi 1918 University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, Texas Active [19]
37. Beta Chi 1919 University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio Inactive (1928)
38. Gamma Delta 1919 University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison, Wisconsin Inactive (1924)
39. Beta Omega 1920 Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland Inactive (1926)
40. Gamma Gamma 1920 Columbia University New York City, New York Inactive
41. Gamma Kappa 1920 University of Georgia Chicago, Illinois Inactive
42. Gamma Theta 1920 Tufts University Medford, Massachusetts Inactive (1928)
43. Gamma Zeta 1920 University of Toronto Toronto, Ontario, Canada Inactive (1940)
44. Gamma Lambda 1921 University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Inactive (1929)
45. Gamma Mu 1921 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Inactive (1949)
46. Gamma Nu 1921 Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts Inactive
47. Gamma Xi 1922 St. Louis St. Louis, Missouri Inactive (1929)
48. Gamma Pi 1923 Wake Forest University Winston-Salem, North Carolina Inactive
49. Gamma Rho 1923 University of Arkansas Fayetteville, Arkansas Inactive (1949)
50. Gamma Sigma 1923 NYU and Bellevue Hospital Medical College New York City, New York Inactive
51. Gamma Tau 1923 University of Manitoba Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada Inactive (1968)
52. Gamma Upsilon 1924 Indiana University Bloomington Bloomington, Indiana Inactive (1944)
53. Beta Gamma 1926 University of Mississippi Oxford, Mississippi Inactive
54. Eta 1928 Rush Medical College Chicago, Illinois Inactive (1930)
55. Beta Nu 1929 McGill University Montreal, Quebec, Canada Inactive (1944)
56. Beta Kappa 1930 Duke University Durham, North Carolina Inactive
57. Beta Iota 1931 Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, Louisiana Inactive (1943)
58. Phi 1931 Northwestern University Evanston, Illinois Inactive
59. Gamma Phi 1942 Baylor University Waco, Texas Inactive (1950)

References[]

  1. ^ Bailey, Harold J., Ed. Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities. Fifteenth Edition (1949). pp 561-562
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Anson, Jack L.; Marchenasi, Robert F., eds. (1991) [1879]. Baird's Manual of American Fraternities (20th ed.). Indianapolis, IN: Baird's Manual Foundation, Inc. p. V-88–90. ISBN 978-0963715906.
  3. ^ Theta Kappa Psi would name this as its Pi chapter, dating to 1908.
  4. ^ Theta Kappa Psi would name the originating Alpha chapter of Phi Delta as its Phi Delta chapter, dating it to 1901. All chapters of this national were named Alpha; The Long Island Alpha remained active until 1950.
  5. ^ Became Phi Delta chapter of Theta Kappa Psi, lasting until 1950.
  6. ^ Baird's 20th notes this school as a name change to what is now LIU, with the chapter listed as predating establishment of the school by several decades. This appears to have been a error in Baird's (p.II-98). On another page (p.VIII-42) in the text describing Phi Delta the school is listed as Long Island Hospital Medical College, a small school which was linked on another WP page to a hospital that closed in 2012. The school, however, had a long history by then, and became a unit of SUNY.
  7. ^ Became the Beta Xi chapter of Theta Kappa Psi.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Previously two schools in St. Louis, hosting two Phi Delta chapters, the schools have merged.
  9. ^ The Washington University chapter appears to have become the Beta Zeta chapter of Theta Kappa Psi, noted as being dormant by 1912.
  10. ^ This school discontinued in 1907.
  11. ^ This school discontinued in 1909.
  12. ^ There are several similarly named medical schools in Canada. This seems the likely successor school.
  13. ^ This chapter was apparently not given as a Theta Kappa Psi chapter name, nor is there a successor school. The school's demise may have made it a moot point.
  14. ^ While the school continues under another name, this chapter was apparently not given a chapter name under Theta Kappa Psi.
  15. ^ Became the Beta Rho chapter of Theta Kappa Psi.
  16. ^ After Kappa Psi's first reorganization, its Alpha chapter would remain akin to a Grand Chapter of alumni leaders and not be associated with a specific school.
  17. ^ Baird's 20th says "USC". Assuming this is the school in California, and not Univ of South Carolina.
  18. ^ Baird's lists this as "Southwestern Medical". This may have been the school that merged into Southern Methodist in 1911, but that school is noted as closing its medical school in 1915.
  19. ^ This chapter continues under the name Phi Beta Pi. See the University of Texas Medical Branch portal for more information, accessed 9 Dec 2020
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