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Carter Ashton Jenkens, the 18-year old son of a minister, had been a student at Rutgers University, New Jersey, where he had joined Chi Phi Fraternity. When he transferred to Richmond College in the fall of 1900, he sought companions to take the place of the Chi Phi brothers he had left behind at Rutgers. During the course of the term, he found five men who had already been drawn into a bond of an informal fellowship, and he urged them to join him in applying for a charter of Chi Phi at Richmond College. They agreed, and the request for charter was forwarded to Chi Phi only to meet with refusal because Chi Phi felt that Richmond College, as any college with less that 300 students, was too small for the establishment of a Chi Phi chapter.
Wanting to maintain
their fellowship, the six men, Jenkens, William Carter, Thomas Wright, William
Phillips, Benjamin Gaw, and William Wallace, decided to form their own local
fraternity. Of the six men, Jenkens was the only one who really knew what a
fraternity was, so the task of drawing the plans for the fraternity fell to
him.
Early records described young Jenkens' thorough search for a philosophy upon
which a new college fraternity could be built. He discovered in the Bible what
he called "The greatest truth the world has ever known."
A committee of Jenkens, Gaw, and Phillips was appointed to discuss with the
administration of the college. These men met with a faculty committee, where
they requested to present their case.
The fraternity committee was requested to explain:
(1)The need for a new fraternity since chapters of five national fraternities
were on the campus and the total enrollment at Richmond College was less than
300.
(2)The wisdom of this attempt to organize a new fraternity with twelve members,
of whom seven were seniors.
(3)The right to name the new fraternity Sigma Phi, the name of an already established
national fraternity.
Jenkins, Gaw, and Phillips answered along this line: "This fraternity will
be different, it will be based on the love of God and the principle of peace
through brotherhood. The number of members will be increased from the undergraduate
classes. We will change the name to Sigma Phi Epsilon." Though the discussion
lasted some time, the faculty committee was friendly, and permission was granted
for the organization of the new fraternity to proceed, provided full responsibility
for the consequences would rest on the group of twelve students.
Immediately at the close of the conference with the faculty committee, the fraternity
committee rushed to Jenkens' room to borrow Hugh Carter's Greek-English Lexicon;
convinces themselves that Epsilon had a desirable meaning, and then telegraphed
jeweler Eaton in Goldsboro, North Carolina, to add an E at the point of each
of the twelve badges which were manufactured and ready for shipment. Before
the job of adding an E on the badges was complete, eight other students were
pledged to join SigEp. The purchase order was then increased to twenty badges
at $8 each, with the initials of each an engraved on the back of his badge.
These twenty original heart-shaped badges were of Yellow gold, with alternating
rubies and garnets around the edge of the heart, with the Greek characters Sigma
Phi and the skull and crossbones in gold and black enamel in the center and
a black Epsilon in gold at the point. (William Hugh Carter's and Thomas V. "Uncle
Tom" McCaul's original badges are on display at Zollinger House.)
Founder Lucian Cox reflected on the "Brotherhood that has inspired hi and
his brothers when he wrote in the Sigma Phi Epsilon Journal, Vol. 1 No. 1, March,
1904: "As a member of an ideal fraternity, the resources of every member
of that body are my resources, the product of their lives is my daily life.
The Fraternity is a common storehouse for experience, moral rectitude, and spirituality;
the larger and purer the contribution of the individual the greater the resources
of each member." Five men were pledged before Christmas and were initiated
in January, 1902. The last three of the first group of twenty were initiated
February 1, 1902, and another was initiated in March.