What is Sigma Chi ----

Sigma Chi is a values based orginization and brotherhood with roots in the collegiate experience that engenders a lifelong commitment to strive to achieve true friendship, equal justice and the fulfillment of learning as part of our overall responsibilities to the broader communities in which we live.

We achieve these ideals through the practice of character qualities embodied in our Ritual, and continuously reaffirm our purpose through the observance of Sigma Chi’s Governing Laws and through adherence to the decisions of our legislative assemblies, which empower and direct our leadership.

What is the Fundamental Purpose of Sigma Chi?
The fundamental purpose of the Sigma Chi Fraternity is the cultivation, maintenance and accomplishment of the ideals of friendship, justice and learning within our membership.

Sigma Chi Fraternity best serves its purpose by developing, implementing and monitoring programs that foster leadership, build character and promote positive relationship skills which, in turn, enable our members to become productive and caring participants in their families, colleges and communities.

Core Values, Vision and Mission
Sigma Chi’s core values are friendship, justice and learning. Our vision is to become the preeminent collegiate leadership development organization—aligned, focused and living our core values. Our mission is to develop values-based leaders committed to the betterment of character, campus and community.

Are There Any Famous Sigma Chi's?
The list is too long to mention, but yes there are thousands of famous Sigma Chi's in every imaginable industry and walk of life.  From Business, Entertainment, Science, Government and Religion to name a few.  Not a year goes by that you dont learn of someone else famous thats a Sigma Chi and you say, "Wow, thats cool that he's a Sig, I never knew that".

Heres a small list:

John Wayne - Motion Picture Actor 
David Letterman - Talk Show Host
Brad Pitt - Television and Movie Actor
Jeff McMahon - Keyboardist for Tim McGraw and his band, the Dancehall Doctors.
Roy Gum - Inventor of the FLEXX Internet Operating System and developer of this site. 
Carson Daly - MTV Personality 
Tom Selleck - Television and Movie Actor
Matt Groening - Creator of The Simpsons
Eddie Murphy - Actor and Comedian 
Woody Harrelson - Motion Picture Actor 
Warren Beatty - Motion Picture Actor and Producer
Brian Dennehy - Motion Picture Actor 
Clarence Gilyard - Jimmy Trivette on "Walker Texas Ranger"
Woody Hayes - Former Ohio State Football Coach 
Bud Adams - Owner of the Tennessee Titans 
Jim Palmer - Hall of Fame Baseball Pitcher 
Mike Ditka - Super Bowl winning Coach of the Chicago Bears 
Mike Holmgren - Super Bowl winning Coach of the Green Bay Packers 
Drew Brees - Quarterback for the San Diego Chargers 
Jim Everett - Former Quarterback of the New Orleans Saints
Robert Griese - Super Bowl winning Quarterback of the miami Dolphins 
Kliff Kingsbury - Former Texas Tech Quarterback 
Eddie Sutton - Oklahoma State Basketball Coach 
James Brady - Press Secretary for President Reagan who was shot during Reagan's assasination attempt
Barry Goldwater - Arizona Senator and 1968 Republican Presidential Candidate 
Grover Cleveland - President of the United States 
Frank Murphy - US Supreme Court Judge 
William Marriott - President & CEO of Marriott Hotel Corp. 
Michael D. Rose - CEO of Holiday Corp., parent company of Holiday Inns 
Richard Nunis - Chairman of Walt Disney Attractions 
Carl Bausch - Chairman of Bausch Lomb 
John Gingrich - CEO of Nestle 
Ben Wells - President of 7-Up Co. 
James Barksdale - CEO of Netscape Communications 
Steven Lew - CEO of Universal Studios 
Charles Weaver - CEO of the Clorox Company 
John Madigan - President of The Tribune Company 
Ted Rogers - President of Rogers Communications 
Lod Cook - CEO of ARCO 
John Young - American's Most Experienced Astronaut 
Greg Harbaugh - U.S. Space Shuttle Astronaut 
Gavin & Joe Maloof - Owners of the Sacremento Kings 
Barry Ackerley - Owner of the Seattle Supersonics 
Bob McNair - Owner of the Houston Texans 
Mark DeRosa - Atlanta Braves Infielder 
Hank Stram - Super Bowl winning Coach of the Kansas City Chiefs 
Dennis Swanson - President of ABC Sports 
Patrick Muldoon - Actor on "Days of our Lives" 
Merlin Olsen - Former Football Player and Actor 
Ted McGinley - Actor on "Married with Children" 
William Christopher - Actor on "M.A.S.H." 
Rip Torn - Motion Picture Actor 
Mike Peters - Pulizer Prize cartoonist of "Mother Goose and Grimm" 
Alan Sugg - President of the University of Arkansas System 
General Merrill McPeak - Chief of Staff, U.S. Air Force 
H. Jackson Brown Jr. - Best-Selling Author of "Life's Little Instruction Book" 
Gordon Gould - Primary Inventor of the Laser 
Dr. William DeVries - Pioneering Surgeon of the Artificial Heart

Does Sigma Chi Haze?

The answer is no!

The fundamental purpose of the Sigma Chi Fraternity is the cultivation, maintenance and accomplishment of the ideals of friendship, justice and learning within our membership.  

In the pursuit of these high ideals, the Sigma Chi Fraternity is able to offer tremendous value in augmenting the collegiate experience and supporting the life journey of each of our members. We hope to assist brothers to become men of character, caring husbands, compassionate fathers, and community leaders. 

With this as the purpose of the fraternity, hazing has no part in the cultivation of life long friendships or trust among individuals.On January 31, 2005 Sigma Chi announced a zero-tolerance stance on the issue of hazing. Sigma Chi defines hazing as "an act performed by any Sigma Chi or pledge member that results in an environment of servitude or in any way endangers or demeans a Sigma Chi or pledge member, regardless of that person's willingness to participate in that act.

How Does Sigma Chi Rank?

Sigma Chi is one of the largest and oldest fraternities in the world with 218 undergraduate and 149 alumni chapters with a total of 260,000 members.  There have been thousands of awards, articles and even award winning songs writen about Sigma Chi.

In addition, thousands of Sigma Chi's are famous inventors, government leaders, business executives, athletes and celebrities!

However, all comparisons stop there! 

No other fraternity is as well known or recognized for its outstanding leadership, character and commitment to excellence. Sigma Chi offers a host of social life rewards, but it does so in the context of good character. Integrity, sound judgment and loyalty are all lofty goals which sometimes find themselves contradictory to the impulses of collegiate life. Sigma Chi provides a continuum of character development that assists young men to develop the qualities of their character.

Sigma Chi is proud to boast it has the most committed alumni members in the Greek world. Alumni throughout North America demonstrate their commitment to Sigma Chi by volunteering their time to enhance the experience of undergraduate brothers. Alumni volunteers provide housing, advise chapter officers, and serve as personal and professional mentors.

Still, the best measure of the quality of Sigma Chi is the recognition it receives from others.  Sigma Chi was honored by the United States Congress on its 150th anniversary on June 13th2005, becoming the first Greek-letter society so honored



Birth of Sigma Chi ----

A Disagreement

A

In the fall of 1854 a disagreement arose within the Kappa chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon (DKE) at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. This chapter consisted of 12 men. Six of them, led by Whitelaw Reid, supported one of the members for Poet in the Erodelphian Literary Society. Four of the other six members, James Parks Caldwell, Isaac M. Jordan, Benjamin Piatt Runkle and Franklin Howard Scobey, refused to vote for the brother because they knew him to lack poetic abilities. The man they did favor for that office was not a Deke. Thomas Cowan Bell and Daniel William Cooper were not members of Erodelphian, but their relation to the disagreement was unqualified endorsement of the four. Thus, they became six.

The chapter of 12 was evenly divided in a difference of opinion that ordinarily would have been decided one way or the other and immediately forgotten. But both sides considered it a matter of principle, and could not reach a compromise. During the ensuing months, the groups disagreed so much that their friendship grew distant.


A Schism at Dinner

Chapter meetings, or attempted chapter meetings, occurred for months with the breach constantly widening. In February 1855, at an Oxford restaurant, a dramatic dinner meeting between the dissenting groups set the stage for Sigma Chi's founding. Bell, Caldwell, Cooper, Jordan, Runkle and Scobey hosted the event, hoping to mend ways with the other six. They were on hand early, awaiting developments with anticipation. Of the meeting, Founder Benjamin Piatt Runkle said, “With the kindest of intentions, we determined to give a dinner in their honor. I remember that the feast was prepared at the village restaurant, the guests invited, and on the appointed night we gathered and waited for the guests. They did not come for a long time, and then only Mr. Reid and with a stranger. He took into his confidence Minor Millikin (an alumnus of the fraternity from nearby Hamilton, Ohio) and the two decided on strenuous proceedings.”


Minor Millikin Steps Up

Millikin lost no time. “My name is Minor Millikin,” he said. “I live in Hamilton. I am a man of few words.” He then passed judgment on all of the matters in dispute. Since he had heard only one side of the story, his verdict was against Runkle, Scobey and the others who had originally opposed election of the DKE as the Poet in the literary society. Millikin found them guilty.

Next, Millikin unfolded a plan he and Reid had concocted by which “justice” could be satisfied with the formal expulsion of the leaders in the rebellion (undoubtedly Runkle and Scobey), after which the others, having been properly chastised, could remain in the chapter.

At this dramatic moment Runkle stepped forward, pulled off his DKE pin, tossed it upon the table and said to Millikin, “I didn't join this Fraternity to be anyone's tool. And that, sir, is my answer!” Runkle stalked out of the room, and his five colleagues followed.


Six Against Six

The final meeting of the 12 active members of Delta Kappa Epsilon was held in Reid's room in the “Old Southeast” building several days later. After a strenuous effort, led by Reid, for the expulsion of the six, with six against six on all vital issues, the meeting broke up in considerable disorder.

A rather prolonged correspondence ensued with the Delta Kappa Epsilon parent chapter at Yale, resulting in the April 1855 expulsion of Bell, Caldwell, Cooper, Jordan, Runkle and Scobey. It was at this time they began making plans to found their own fraternity.

 

The Early Years ----


"We entered upon all our college duties with great zeal and earnestness, studied hard, tried to excel in every department of study, contended for every hall or college prize and endeavored to make our Fraternity have a high and honorable standing.”
~Issac M. Jordan, Founder

The Framework of a Fraternity

One of the best moves the first six Founders ever made was to associate themselves with William Lewis Lockwood. He had entered Miami early in 1855 but had not joined a fraternity. He was the “businessman” of the group and possessed a remarkable organizing ability. More than any other Founder, he was responsible for setting up the general plan of the Fraternity, much of which endures to this day.

During the latter months of the 1854-55 academic year, Runkle and Caldwell lived in a second-floor room of a building near Oxford's public square on High Street-now known as the birthplace of Sigma Chi. The Founders held many of the earlier organizational meetings of Sigma Chi in this room, and it was there that Runkle and Lockwood designed the badge. The White Cross was designed exactly as we know it today except for the letters Sigma Phi in the black center which were changed to Sigma Chi.

Having been members of Delta Kappa Epsilon, six of the Founders were familiar with the general outline of fraternity constitution and ritual content. They were considerably influenced by Lockwood, who had known little of Delta Kappa Epsilon or its differences. With all of their plans formally completed, the seven Founders of the new Fraternity announced its establishment by wearing their badges for the first time in public on Commencement Day at Miami University, June 28, 1855.


Built to Last 

The working fraternal conceptions of Sigma Chi Fraternity have long been identified with the words friendship, justice and learning. These three elements were the basic ideals our Founders used in forming the foundation of Sigma Chi.

In their new fraternity, they held the qualities of congenial tastes, quality fellowship and genuine friendship to be indispensable. The element of thorough fellowship was regarded as a characteristic of all real fraternity endeavors, thus they sought true friendship.

In matters of general college interest, the Founders had refused to be limited simply by the ties of their DKE brotherhood. The Founders' new association was surely not planned to prevent laudable mutual helpfulness. On the contrary it was designed in every worthy way to enhance such helpfulness. The new fraternity stood for the “square deal” in all campus relations. It exalted justice.


Rigorous Academics

In the 19th century, the academics of college were very strenuous. College men of the day studied subjects such as spherical trigonometry; Roman history; odes and satires of Homer, Horace and Plato. A strong emphasis was placed on literature in all campus activities. In the literary exercises of the chapter, literary training was regular and rigid. Founder Issac M. Jordan once said, “We entered upon all our college duties with great zeal and earnestness, studied hard, tried to excel in every department of study, contended for every hall or college prize and endeavored to make our Fraternity have a high and honorable standing.” The founders placed learning in high regard and importance.


The Spirit of Sigma Chi

The Founders' unfortunate experience in Delta Kappa Epsilon, which they saw as a group focused on conformity for political gain, stirred their hearts and their spirit. They found it a necessity to allow and accept differences in points of views and opinions, realizing that doing so brought opportunities and pleasures. This “spirit” became documented as The Spirit of Sigma Chi. Though The Spirit calls for men who are inherently “different,” it is expected that the members, in their differences, remain responsible, honorable, gentlemanly, friendly-indeed all those characteristics that are also listed in The Jordan Standard.