| THETA CHI SOCIETY, as it was
then known, was founded at Norwich
University, Norwich, Vermont, at nine o'clock on Thursday
evening, April 10, 1856. At that time
Frederick Norton Freeman '57, and Arthur Chase '56, met in
Freeman's room in the Old South Barracks of the University
and, to quote from the minutes of the first meeting, "being
called to order by Mr. Chase, Messrs. Chase and Freeman mutually
took the oaths rescribed and declared each other true and
accepted members of the Theta Chi Society." From this
humble beginning Theta Chi Fraternity has grown to its present
status.
To quote again from the minutes of the first
meeting we learn that "The Theta Chi Society was the
idea and plan of Frederick Norton Freeman, and with the assistance
of Arthur Chase, his plans were perfected and the society
was organized." Chase was elected president and Freeman
was elected secretary. The next evening, April 11, the first
initiation was conducted. One of the initiates was Edward
Bancroft Williston of San Diego, California, and the other
was Lorenzo Potter of Elkhorn, Wisconsin.
The historical facts of the founding of Theta
Chi were taken from old minute books, old correspondence,
and the personal recollections of Alpha members who related,
many years later, what had been passed on to them.
In this early period of American college life,
fraternities were being organized in institutions all over
the country. Many were local societies which enjoyed brief
existences, while others, planned along national lines, grew,
flourished, and expanded and are the national fraternities
which we know today.
Freeman and Chase, together with Egbert Phelps,
ex-'56, had been planning the organization of the society
for more than two years prior to the organizational meeting.
Phelps left Norwich in 1854 and entered Union College where
he joined Chi Psi Fraternity, but he kept in contact with
Freeman and helped so much with his advice and suggestions
that it is felt he should be credited, at least, with being
the "assistant founder" of Theta Chi. It was Phelps
who suggested the name of the Society and designed the first
badge which was virtually the same as the official badge used
today. Perhaps from his fraternity experience at Union College,
he passed on to Freeman additional advice and suggestions
which were helpful in writing our first ritual and constitution.
Theta Chi was the first Greek Letter society
to make its appearance at Norwich. It was preceded in 1853
by a secret society known as the "Regulators." Whether
there was any connection between the Regulators and Theta
Chi is open to conjecture. It is known that Freeman was a
Regulator and that when the Regulators passed out of existence
in 1856 practically all of the paraphernalia of this organization
passed into the possession of Theta Chi Society.
The lives of the Founders of Theta Chi Fraternity
should be interesting to us now as we turn back the pages
of history for over 130 years. How well they planned and with
what ability, foresight, and wisdom they did their original
organization work is attested by the fact that throughout
the long years since our founding the fundamentals of the
organization, as expressed in the original constitution, to
this day remain unchanged. Our present ritual includes the
original ritual used in 1856. The oaths taken by Freeman and
Chase on that April evening long ago have since been shared
by every man initiated into Theta Chi.
The founder of Theta Chi Fraternity, Frederick
Norton Freeman, was born in Claremont, New Hampshire, on March
2, 1839. His ancestors on his father's side had been in America
since the early sixteen hundreds. The grandmother of Freeman
was a Chase, and through this circumstance Freeman and Arthur
Chase were distant cousins. Freeman attended Claremont Academy
and entered Norwich University at the age of fourteen. he
received the degrees of B.S. in 1856 and B.A. in 1857 and
A.M. in 1860. In the years of 1858 and 1859 Freeman read law
in his father's office in Claremont, New Hampshire, and was
admitted to the bar, but did not practice.
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In 1860 he became associated
with Yonkers Collegiate and Military Institute in Yonkers,
New York, and in 1861 he was made superintendent of this institution
with the title of colonel. In 1862 he took a similar position
at the Englewood Military and Collegiate Institute of Perth
Amboy, New Jersey. It is interesting to note that while Freeman
was at Perth Amboy, Alpha Chapter made an unsuccessful attempt
to establish a chapter of the fraternity at the Perth Amboy
institution. In 1864 Freeman became the first superintendent
of the Pennsylvania Coal Company at Newburgh, New York.
While engaged in the construction of a new
dock for his company at Newburgh, Freeman contracted a severe
cold which progressed rapidly to pneumonia. He died suddenly
on March 28, 1867, at the age of 28 years. Freeman was a young
man of great promise and achievement, who held positions of
responsibility and trust far beyond his years. It was unfortunate
that his span of life was so short.
Arthur Chase was descended from a long line
of New Englanders. He was born at Bellows Falls, Vermont,
on October 21, 1835. His father was an Episcopal minister
who later became the first Bishop of New Hampshire. When Arthur
was nine years old the family moved to Claremont, New Hampshire,
and this town remained his home for the balance of his life.
Chase entered Norwich University in the fall
of 1852, shortly before he became seventeen years old. He
was graduated in 1856 and immediately entered a law office
in Claremont to begin the study of law. He followed this study
by attending the Harvard Law School from which he graduated
in 1857 with the degree of LL.B. He practiced law in Claremont
for nine years and then entered newspaper work, purchasing
The National Eagle, a weekly newspaper published in Claremont,
in 1868. Chase was married in 1863 to Garafelia Davis. Seven
children were born of the union, four of whom, two sons and
two daughters, reached adult life and survived their father.
After three years of newspaper work, Chase's
health failed, and on the advice of his physician he retired
to a farm he purchased on the outskirts of Claremont.
Arthur Chase was always a power in his community.
At one time he was superintendent of public schools and filled
the position with considerable efficiency. He was a staunch
Episcopalian and active in church and diocese affairs until
the time of his death.
Although Arthur Chase never enjoyed robust
health, death came unexpectedly and suddenly on November 20,
1888. Chase was 53 years of age at his death, living scarcely
beyond middle life. It was said that he lived more in fifty
years than most men do in three-score and ten.
At the Seventy-Fifth Anniversary Convention
held at Northfield, Vermont, in 1931, the Fraternity placed
suitably-marked granite memorials at the grave of Freeman
near Plainfield, New Hampshire, and the grave of Chase in
Claremont, New Hampshire.
The third man concerned with the origin of
Theta Chi Fraternity was Egbert Phelps. While full credit
for the founding is conceded to Freeman and Chase, Phelps
did a great deal to assist the Founders in their planning
and would no doubt have taken a much more active part had
he not transferred to Union College in 1854. He never became
a member of Theta Chi Society, although he was made an honorary
member of the Fraternity after his death.
Phelps was born at Middlebury, Vermont, December
8, 1835. He entered Norwich University in 1852 and was graduated
from Union College in 1856 with a B.A. degree. At Union College
he became a member of Chi Psi Fraternity. In 1861 he joined
the 19th United States Infantry and served throughout the
entire Civil War, finishing with the rank of captain.
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He was a writer of some note,
being a frequent contributor to the popular magazines of the
day. In 1871 he was admitted to the bar at Burlington, Illinois.
Phelps practiced law for many years in Joliet, Illinois, where
he lived from 1875 until his death on July 26, 1916.
The early history of Theta Chi Fraternity is
closely connected with the history of Norwich University.
The University was founded at Norwich, Vermont, in 1819 being
then known as The American Literary, Scientific, and Military
Academy. It was a pioneer engineering college of the country
and has always maintained its military training and traditions.
In 1834 the name was changed to Norwich University.
In the Spring of 1866 the Norwich University
buildings burned. Old South Barracks, where Theta Chi was
founded, was completely destroyed. It is reasonable to believe
that some of the early records and relics of the Fraternity
were lost at this time. The University moved after the fire
to Northfield, Vermont, its present location. At the Seventy-Fifth
Anniversary Convention the Fraternity erected a granite monument
with a bronze plaque at Norwich, Vermont, to commemorate the
founding of the Fraternity.
In the first decade of the Fraternity's existence
a number of serious handicaps were experienced. The Civil
War greatly depleted the student body of the University, for
Norwich was a military school. After the fire in 1866 there
was doubt for a while as to whether or not the University
would continue. The war, the fire, and the uncertainty regarding
the continuation of the University seriously lowered the attendance,
and the school opened in the Fall of 1866 with only nineteen
students. In spite of the low enrollment which continued for
some years, we are told in "The History of Norwich University"
by Dodge and Ellis that "The Theta Chi and Alpha Sigma
Pi fraternities flourished in this period, 1866 to 1880."
Just what the word "flourished" meant is not known,
but it is supposed that even with a small university enrollment,
Theta Chi was able to get its share of new members.
In 1881 the student body of Norwich was reduced
to a dozen men, and Theta Chi found itself with one active
member. This critical situation was relieved when local alumni
worked with the undergraduate member, James M. Holland, '83,
in pledging and initiating Phil S. Randall, '86, and Henry
B. Hersey, '85, thus preserving the existence of the Fraternity.
After 1888 the affairs of the University took
a decided turn for the better, and from then on there was
never a question of Theta Chi leadership on the Norwich campus.
From its very inception Theta Chi was planned as a national
fraternity. Why it existed as a single chapter for nearly
fifty years will probably never be definitely known. Expansion
was no doubt delayed by two conditions, the unstable conditions
of the University at first, and anti-expansion sentiment,
which developed later within the chapter.
In 1888 Theta Chi Fraternity was incorporated
under the laws of Vermont. From 1888 until the establishment
of the Beta Chapter, fourteen years later, the history of
the Fraternity is a history of steady growth of a chapter
both in general strength and in members. Norwich University
disbanded its fraternities in 1960, so Alpha Chapter no longer
exists.
With the establishment of Beta Chapter
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology at Boston Massachusetts,
on December 13, 1902, a new era opened for Theta Chi, an era
of country-wide expansion and national organization and administration.
Although hindered by a serious depression and two world wars,
Theta Chi has grown, and prospered beyond the dreams of the
Founders to the position it now holds in the national fraternity
scene. |