Kappa Pi Kappa: Difference between revisions
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*[[Winfield Scott Hammond]] 1884, Governor of Minnesota |
*[[Winfield Scott Hammond]] 1884, Governor of Minnesota |
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*[[Samuel D. Felker]] 1882, Governor of New Hampshire |
*[[Samuel D. Felker]] 1882, Governor of New Hampshire |
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*[[Richard Alcorn]] 1972, Awesome Man |
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*[[Samuel Walker McCall]] 1874, Governor of Massachusetts |
*[[Samuel Walker McCall]] 1874, Governor of Massachusetts |
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*[[Irving Webster Drew]] 1870, U.S. Senator from New Hampshire |
*[[Irving Webster Drew]] 1870, U.S. Senator from New Hampshire |
Revision as of 03:41, 4 June 2011
Kappa Kappa Kappa Society | |
---|---|
ΚΚΚ | |
The Kappa Kappa Kappa Seal | |
Gegründet | July 13, 1842 Dartmouth College |
Typ | Social |
Motto | Tui Filii Dartmuthensi Tuoque Honori Fidelis |
Colors | Dartmouth Green |
Chapters | 1 |
Hauptsitz | 1 Webster Avenue Hanover, New Hampshire USA |
Website | http://www.tri-kap.com/ |
Kappa Kappa Kappa (Tri-Kap) is a local men's fraternity at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. The fraternity founded in 1842 is the second-oldest fraternity at Dartmouth College and the oldest local fraternity in the nation. Its house is at 1 Webster Avenue.
Despite offers to establish additional branches at other institutions, the brotherhood has remained a single-school institution for the duration of its history and is not a chapter of any national organization. Today it is one of the many recognized Dartmouth College Greek organizations.
The organization has no affiliation with the post-American Civil War Ku Klux Klan, which first formed 24 years later (in 1866) and adopted Roman-alphabet initials, “KKK”, similar to the Greek letters of Tri-Kap. According to legend, Kappa Kappa Kappa sued the Ku Klux Klan for defamation of name but lost because the judge ruled that the similarity in initials of the organizations was sheer coincidence.[citation needed]
History
Early history
Dartmouth College was founded by Eleazar Wheelock in 1769. Fourteen years later the first student society came into existence, and student societies and the College have been intertwined ever since.
For much of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, two societies vied for preeminence: the "Socials" (officially the Society of Social Friends, est. 1783) and the "Fraters" (the United Fraternity, est. 1786). By 1815, half of the College were members, and a fierce competition existed between the two in order to attract the finest students.
In 1842, a dispute arose within the Fraters as to a vote for the organization's leadership. The fracture resulted in the formation of Psi Upsilon, by those who supported John Tyler in the contest, and Kappa Kappa Kappa, by those who supported Harrison Hobart.
The Society
Tri-Kap was founded on July 13, 1842, by Hobart and two of his close companions, Stephen Gordon Nash and John Dudley Philbrick. The society was based on the principles of Democracy, loyalty to Dartmouth, and equality of opportunity. Originally a literary and debating society, in 1905 Tri-Kap officially became a social society and has remained so ever since.
Physical Plants
Tri-Kap was the first student society at Dartmouth with its own meeting place, a building called The Hall that originally was located where the Hopkins Center for the Arts stands today. Opened on July 28, 1860, the Hall served as Tri-Kap's home until the Society moved into the Parker House in 1894, located where the modern-day Silsby Hall stands. In 1923, the Society moved into 1 Webster Avenue, where it resides to this day.
Modern History
Since 1905, when it officially became a social society, Tri-Kap has remained popular on the Dartmouth campus. Currently, Tri-Kap is one of Dartmouth's largest and most popular fraternities with over 60 brothers hailing from all over the country and internationally as well.
Famous alumni
- Alex M. Azar 1988, Deputy Sec. of U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services
- Peter Robinson 1979, White House Speechwriter for Ronald Reagan
- Nick Lowery, three-time Pro Bowl kicker.
- David Shribman 1976, Pulitzer Prize winner
- John F. Lundgren 1973, Director, President and Chief Executive Officer of Stanley Black & Decker, a Fortune 500 Company
- Mark Dillen Stitham 1972, actor Hawaii TV series [Jake & the Fatman, Raven, Unsolved Mysteries, Lost]
- Douglas Walgren 1963, U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania
- David Rosenbaum 1963, New York Times Journalist
- Nitya Pibulsonggram 1962, Foreign Minister of Thailand and former Thai Ambassador to the United States
- Dr. Bob 1902, Co-Founder of Alcoholics Anonymous
- Channing H. Cox 1901, Governor of Massachusetts
- Sherman Burroughs 1894, U.S. Congressman from New Hampshire
- John Barrett 1889, U.S. Minister to Siam, the Argentine Republic, Panama, & Colombia
- Winfield Scott Hammond 1884, Governor of Minnesota
- Samuel D. Felker 1882, Governor of New Hampshire
- Samuel Walker McCall 1874, Governor of Massachusetts
- Irving Webster Drew 1870, U.S. Senator from New Hampshire
- Henry Eben Burnham 1865, U.S. Senator from New Hampshire
- Henry Moore Baker 1864, U.S. Congressman from New Hampshire
- Col. Frank Haskell 1854, wrote famous first-hand account of the battle of Gettysburg
- Charles Henry Bell 1844, U.S. Senator and Governor of New Hampshire
- Ambrose A. Ranney 1844, U.S. Congressman from Massachusetts
- Benjamin Franklin Flanders 1842 (honorary), Governor of Louisiana
- Daniel Clark 1834 (honorary), U.S. Senator
- Rufus Choate 1819 (honorary), U.S. Senator
- Levi Woodbury 1809 (honorary), Gov. of New Hampshire, U.S. Senator, Sec. of the Treasury, and U.S. Supreme Court Justice
- Daniel Webster 1801 (honorary), U.S. Senator, Congressman, and Secretary of State
- Lewis Cass (honorary), Governor of Michigan, U.S. Senator, and Presidential nominee