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The clock tower at Longwood was already up in 1997, because KD held its centennial convention in Norfolk that year and offered a bus trip up to Farmville to tour the campus and see sights significant to the sorority. I have a photo of the clock I took back then.
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This is a flagpole donated to Union College by Psi Upsilon.
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3279/...df760a9a_z.jpg and a close up of the writing on it. http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3202/...7fbbcbc5_z.jpg And also at Union, this was apparently donated for our 150th anniversary http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3295/...c239e16a_z.jpg. |
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Is anyone familiar with other historical markers in Indiana? Is this omission format common or unique to just Theta's marker? |
Sigma Chi Fraternity Monuments and Memorials -- Information and pictures of the Sigma Chi Monuments and Memorials may be found at the link.
"The work of the Monuments and Memorials Commission (originally the Runkle Monument Commission) began in 1921. Since then, the Commission has always adhered faithfully to its mission—to perpetuate our glorious heritage symbolized by Sigma Chi’s beautiful monuments and memorials. Along with the huge undertaking of erecting monuments to the Seven Founders came our similar challenge of honoring others from our past, including Harry St. John Dixon, Constantine Chapter; John S. McMillin, DePauw 1876; and Joseph Cookman Nate, Illinois Wesleyan 1890; who have all carved an indelible place in our history. The Constantine Memorial signifies survival of our fledgling Fraternity during an unbelievably trying time in American history. Of simple but strong origin is the monument memorializing the all-too-short life of Samuel Clark, Miami (Ohio) 1858, the first Sigma Chi to enter the Chapter Eternal. Finally, we are indeed fortunate to have the Founding Site in Oxford, Ohio, and the Omicron Omicron Museum at Sigma Chi’s J. Dwight Peterson International Headquarters in Evanston, Ill." http://history.sigmachi.org/images/p...ue-1955Big.jpg The Founding Site "Sigma Chi's most important historical monument is the site of the Fraternity's founding, located in Oxford, Ohio. The small room, marked on the outside by a plaque between its two windows, is on the second floor of a building on the north side of High Street at the town square, and was the rooming place of Founders Runkle and Caldwell during their years of enrollment as undergraduates at Miami University. The badge of Sigma Chi was designed in this room and many of the earliest meetings of the Alpha Chapter were held here. In 1973, the Founding Site was purchased and donated to the Sigma Chi Foundation by 41st Grand Consul William P. Huffman Denison 1911. It was renovated and rededicated in 1993." +++ While no picture is shown on the website of the Samuel H. Clark Memorial Monument yet, I would like to share this information about it with y’all. Samuel H. Clark Memorial Monument "The Samuel H. Clark Memorial Monument was dedicated in December 1990, in Brookside Cemetery, West Chester, Ohio, and honors a Sigma Chi brother who had little chance on earth to develop a legacy of brotherhood that most of us share. Samuel H. Clark was the brother who unlocked the gates to the Chapter Eternal and became the first brother, at age 21, to pass away. During the summer of 1856, Clark was stricken with typhoid fever. Our Seven Founders provided their outstretched arms for comfort as their brother slipped away October 1, 1856. The final request Clark made was that the White Cross of Sigma Chi be placed upon the stone that marked his final resting place. With this accomplished, Sigma Chi had witnessed an even deeper meaning and growth to its brotherhood. The original marker is on display at the Founding Site on High Street in Oxford, Ohio. The new memorial is an exact replica of the original." |
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I'm loving seeing all of this information and all of these places and monuments. Keep them coming. |
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A Sigma Nu was in charge of getting agreement from both other organizations as to the final design of the monument. He contacted Kappa Alpha Order and offered him the side closest to their founding school, Washington & Lee. The KA accepted. He then contacted Alpha Tau Omega and gained their approval for having the part of the monument closest to VMI, where they were founded. That left the top portion. http://www.etaphialumni.org/uploads/...7/The_Rock.JPG Yes, the Rock stands outside of our HQ. It is a piece of the original rock, a limestone outcropping at which Sigma Nu experienced its spiritual founding on an October night in 1868. |
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I'll happily post about SigEp in a month or two once the Founders' Walk is completed in Richmond. It ought to be awesome. :D |
I have an urge to bump this thread.
Sinfonia was founded at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston in 1898. At the time, NEC occupied the former St. James Hotel on Franklin Square in Boston’s South End. http://img406.imageshack.us/img406/7108/oldnec.jpg A chapter room was provided for the new fraternity in the basement of the building; I have read that the room had been the barbershop of the St. James. Here is the original Alpha Chapter Room. http://img35.imageshack.us/img35/893...hapterroom.jpg[/URL] In 1903 or so, the Conservatory moved to its current location on Gainsborough Street in Boston. Again, a room was provided for Alpha Chapter. Here’s a picture of that room from the 1948-49 academic year: http://img827.imageshack.us/img827/2...hapterroom.jpg Unfortunately, the Alpha Chapter eventually went inactive after the Conservatory took the room over for administrative uses. Various items from the room are now at Lyrecrest, our Fraternity headquarters. We can no longer visit the sites of either chapter room, but we can at least go to Franklin Square and see the place where we were founded. Fun aside: GCers around my age or older may remember the (really awesome) television show St. Elsewhere from the 1980s. The old NEC, which still stands on Franklin Square in Boston, served as the exterior of the show’s St. Eligius Hospital. You can see it in the opening theme from the show here. (From Season 3 -- check the cast.) Coincidentally, the music for the opening was written by Dave Grusin, a 1953 initiate of our Beta Chi Chapter at the University of Colorado. |
I drive past the Delta Gamma marker at least once a day in Oxford, MS...
http://www.oxfordheritage.org/images..._marker_02.jpg |
Here is SAE's Levere Memorial Temple in Evanston, Illinois.
http://www.sae.net/page.aspx?pid=258 |
Here is Pi Beta Phi's Holt House.
http://www.pibetaphi.org/pibetaphi/aboutus.aspx?id=100 |
The P.E.O. Sisterhood was founded in a second-floor room in Old Main at Iowa Wesleyan College.
http://hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=i297 |
The Chi Omega Greek Theater, Fayetteville, Arkansas
The Chi Omega Greek Theatre is a structure on the University of Arkansas campus in Fayetteville, Arkansas. It was a gift to the university from Chi Omega, completed in 1930. The structure was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1992. It is a replica of the Theatre of Dionysus at the foot of the Acropolis in Greece. Chi Omega was founded at the University of Arkansas in 1895.
http://i829.photobucket.com/albums/z...ek_theatre.jpg |
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