The Phoenix - Chapter 26

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26 CHA P TER

The History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon by Joseph W. Walt additions and revisions by Nancilee D.V. Gasiel and G. Robert Hamrdla BY COMPLETING THIS CHAPTER YOU WILL:

• Understand the origins of the Fraternity • Learn about the founding members of the Fraternity • Understand how the organization has grown and evolved since its founding

M

embers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon have always placed great importance upon the history and traditions that shaped their existence in the organization’s more than 156 years. For that reason, a substantial section of The Phoenix is given over to the story of the Fraternity’s founding and development. In 1916, five years after William C. “Billy” Levere (Northwestern 1898) published his monumental threevolume History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, he prepared an abridged version of it for pledges’ use. He called it The Paragraph History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and the little volume, which passed through many editions, was used by pledges for 30 years. In 1947, the Paragraph History was incorporated into The Phoenix and thus retained its original form substantially to the present time. Those who want to read a more detailed account of the Fraternity’s history are referred to Levere’s aforementioned three-volume work, covering the period from 1856 to 1910, and The Era of Levere, by Joseph W. Walt (Tennessee-Knoxville 1947), which recounts the Fraternity’s history from 1910 to 1930.

young Alabamian of splendid promise. The original idea to found a new Greek-letter fraternity was clearly DeVotie’s. His motive was simple: to perpetuate through the organization the warm friendships he and his friends had already formed on the campus of the university. THE FOUNDERS Noble Leslie DeVotie Noble Leslie DeVotie was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, on January 24, 1838. He spent his early life in Marion, Alabama, just to the south. He entered the University of Alabama in October 1853, in the sophomore class, having previously attended Howard College. All through his university course, he brilliantly maintained his intellectual supremacy, keeping a 96 3⁄4 grade average for his entire coursework at Alabama. He graduated as valedictorian at the head of his class July 17, 1856. In the fall of 1856, he entered Princeton Theological Seminary, from which he graduated in 1859. Then he became pastor of the First Baptist Church at Selma, Alabama. In 1861, he left for Ft. Morgan with the Independent Blues and Governor’s Guard of Selma to serve as their chaplain. On February 12, 1861, as he was about to board a steamer at Fort Morgan, he made a misstep and fell into the water. Three days later, his body was washed ashore. He was the first Alabamian to lose his life in the Civil War.

The Founding and the Founders The Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity was founded March 9, 1856, at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Its founders were eight young men, five of them seniors at the university; the other three were juniors. The leader of the eight was Noble Leslie DeVotie, a

Chapter 26: the History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon

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