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Every group seems to be the first or oldest at something... all very confusing.
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Beat your founding date? Well, Acacia is a direct off-shoot of Freemasonry, and Freemasonry was founded during the building of Solomon's temple, circa 10th Century B.C. So Ha! backatcha.[/tongue in cheek] As always, a good post wptw. |
Thanks MysticCat.
But Farm House fraternity might then have all of us beat. They might claim a founding date of 11000 B.C. when plants were first domesticated in the fertile crescent. Phi Beta Kappa is the oldest greek letter society. That's really the generally accepted answer to this question. As for who was the first women's group to call themselves a sorority or the first fraternity to have a house or the first group to have traveling secretaries or the first group to bring their badge to the moon... personally, I find those discussions tiresome and pointless. So here's a better question: who will be the LAST fraternity or the LAST sorority in existence? Who will be the one group to survive the publication of their ritual, the dwindling of their numbers, a new round of anti-greek legislation on college campuses and the major lawsuits stemming from their ongoing hazing practices? wptw |
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However, some groups that claim that they have or do exist here I tend to discount. The prime example being Theta Nu Epsilon; their website claims a chapter here, but no record what so ever exists of them; so either they are very, very secret, or its all just conjecture and speculation. |
wptw,
Your exasperation is amusing but may be out of place on this thread. People are just reciting whats in their pledge manuals for the most part, and the first few chapters of all the different pledge manuals are probably the same. I only have 5 different Fraternity pledge manuals so can't speak for sure. As far as history goes, I actually know quite a bit about the history of Kappa Sigma as an organization, having read both the written histories of the Fraternity as well as attending the "secret seminars" lol. So yes, obviously Kappa Sigma wasn't started as a colony of an Italian Fraternity in 1400, although your mockery wasn't completely appreciated. I don't particularly enjoy being mocked by someone who sits in safety on the other side of a computer screen. *yawn* its tedious. However, going a step further, I have actually read Baird's Manual of College Fraternities from the late 1800s and have seen some of the historical discrepancies in the more modern published histories of Kappa Sigma and other groups. If you want to really amuse yourselves go back to the Early Baird's and see how the names of your founders may be uncertain and other details you take for granted may change. But, I don't think this thread was meant to look too deeply into the history of the various groups. About the badge on the moon. Well . . . its kind of like Shroedinger's (sp) Cat. Unless we actually look for the badge we don't know for sure . . . LOL. Otherwise its kind of like the Thomas Theorem in sociology. Quote:
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Just quoting this to protect it from deletion! Thank you for the evidence! |
Ah the ispidty of it all!;)
Hell, 1909, LXA, now just who all cares who was first! Baird's Manual shows many who did not survive. Which issue do you have? Are you one of them or one of the "OLDEST"? How many Chapters? Am I suppose to feel that if You are not a LXA, then you are second rate because of many reasons? NOT! The important thing is who is still here and trying to grow and hang on to to what we profess in our own way and thinking. If you do not understand what I am saying then UCK! Love ya all! Sh*t go to doo floors, carpet and cook! Already did laundry!:) |
James,
Exasperation with ignorance of any type is never out of place, especially among educated people who are supposed to know a thing or two about greek history! I have quite a few pledge manuals, and most of them give at least a paragraph to Phi Beta Kappa and Kappa Alpha society. Anyway, perhaps pledges should be taught more than just to recite what’s in the first few pages of their pledge manual. I am not mocking you or Kappa Sigma fraternity, you understand. But I am indeed mocking members that perpetuate this “founded in 1400” myth because if they’re passing misinformation intentionally, then it’s rather vain. And if they’re doing it unintentionally, then it’s rather ignorant. Vanity and ignorance both being most mockworthy in my book! We all “sit in safety on the other side of a computer screen”. Not sure I get your point there. Also I’m a little surprised to be chastised for a sarcastic posting style that you yourself seem to share. In any case, if you find actual debate and the correction of misinformation tedious, then feel free to skip ahead to the next exciting 10-page chapter of “which women’s secret fraternity was the first one east of the Mississippi river but west of the Allegheny mountains to use the greek letter Omicron as the first letter in their name and to choose the yellow-bellied sapsucker as their offical bird”. Now THAT’S tedious. If this trivia interests you, then fine and dandy. But remember that trivia is, well… trivial. The value of your organization does not lie in famous alums and firsts. So why mislead yourself and others to think that way. Don’t you find it odd that people expend so many BTUs arguing this minutia and yet don’t have their facts straight on the most basic aspects of greek history? Don’t you think it’s strange that people think these firsts add some value to their organization, when in fact Baird’s is littered with plenty of groups who were likely first to do this-or-that… before going belly up!? Don’t you find it disturbing that often the first messages rushees receive about our groups are shallow details like famous alumni and century-old “firsts”? If I put myself back in the shoes of a prospective pledge and read through the more squabbly threads debating “firsts”, it doesn’t paint the best picture of greeks. I recall being a college freshman and getting anti-greek rhetoric from every angle – family, friends, classmates. I imagine that’s fairly typical. So I would think my fellow greeks would share my concern about endlessly arguing amongst ourselves about such shallow details, all the while getting the more “meaty” details of greek history wrong. Agreed, Baird’s has always had its inaccuracies, particularly in the very early and the very late editions. However, I think Wm Baird did exceptionally well considering the archival technology available to a greek researcher in the 1880s. So I can excuse the relatively few mistakes he made in his early manuals. It’s harder to excuse a modern greek who still thinks Phi Beta Kappa was just an honor society, or who doesn't know who came after Phi Beta Kappa. The importance of these groups is not some transient factoid. Their significance to the greek world has been hard fact for nearly 2 centuries. Also agreed, this thread was not meant to look too deeply into history. DRau’s question was perfectly answered by the first 2 replies - by Madmax and PiKappRaider within 1 hour. Then the “firsts feeding frenzy” began (as it always seems to do). Personally, I feel that DRau as an Alpha Phi should have already known the answer, but whatever. I only jumped in to correct all the mistakes (and of course to share my disappointment that we seem to know so little of substance about ourselves as a community). As far as the badge on the moon goes… The difference is that Erwin Schrodinger realized and admitted he did not know whether his cat was alive, dying or dead in there. He did not go to some pimps/hos party, hear some stupid unsubstantiated rumor that his cat was in fact dead, and then start posting all willy-nilly about his dead cat on DeadCatChat.com. While we’re on the subject, the Thomas theorem is about as useful as a dead cat. Perhaps less so since, for example, the Thomas Theorem is not very useful for incapacitating an intruder in your home or weighing down the barbecue cover out on the deck. (Cue PETA.) wptw |
Wptw, I have no idea what you're talking about, but your post is really funny! :)
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honeychile |
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Well, not if we can boast that we were the FIRST group to wear blackface, ignore philanthropy and stab each other in the back. Then pledges will flock to us because we were first! Right? wptw |
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honeychile |
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