Phi Phi Chapter of Sigma Chi History
Penn's Phi Phi chapter was established on 27 September 1875 and appeared
in
The Record of that year. The national organization was founded
in 1855 at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. The Upsilon chapter disbanded
("stepped out") in the 1877-78 academic year and was dropped
from
The Record. Twenty years later the Phi Phi chapter was established
at Penn and Sigma Chi re-appeared in
The Record of 1896. It remains
active at Penn in 2003.
Sigma Chi was the third national fraternity founded at Miami University,
in Oxford, Ohio. It followed Beta Theta Pi (1839) and Phi Delta Theta
(1848), but its birth was far more difficult than either of its predecessors.
In June 1855, six men - Thomas Cowan Bell, James Parks Caldwell, Daniel
William Cooper, Isaac M. Jordan, William Lewis Lockwood, Ben Platt Runkle,
and Frank Howard Scobey - withdrew from the Miami chapter of Delta Kappa
Epsilon and formed a new fraternity which they named Sigma Phi. In January
1856, however, members of a rival fraternity stole Sigma Phi's ritual
and other private records, which required the founders to re-name their
organization and adopt a new constitution, bylaws, and ritual. Sigma Chi
emerged from this ordeal and soon flourished, with twelve chapters in
existence by the time of the Civil War.
In their first years, Sigma Chi and the other Miami University fraternities
appealed primarily to Midwestern and Southern colleges. Sigma Chi planted
chapters in the states of Ohio, Indiana, Tennessee, Georgia, Virginia,
and Mississippi. Soon, however, there were chapters at the Pennsylvania
colleges of Bucknell, Dickinson, Gettysburg, and Washington and Jefferson.
In 1875, twelve Penn students formed Sigma Chi's Phi Phi chapter. They
were drawn nearly equally from the College, Law School, and School of
Medicine. They included William Burling Abbey (LL. B. 1876), Simon D.
Addis (M.D. 1875), Cicero Brodhead (M.D. 1875), Frank Eyre (Class of 1875;
M.D. 1875), Walter Lowrie Finley (Class of 1877), James Milo Giddings
(M.D. 1875), Isaac Newton Gordon (Class of 1877), Dwight Morris Lowrie
(LL.B. 1875), Henry Albert Potter (Class of 1877), Earl Milton Wilkins
Seitz (Class of 1877), Amos R. Shalkop, and Joseph Warner Yardley (A.B.
1877). The founders of the Phi Phi chapter did not recruit well, however,
and when the Class of 1877 left campus, the chapter essentially disbanded.
For nearly twenty years Sigma Chi was not represented among Penn's
fraternities. Then, in May 1893, a Philadelphia alumni chapter was
organized and in May 1896 fifteen students, assisted by five alumni
members, re-organized the Phi Phi chapter. By 1905 the Phi Phi chapter
was renting a house at 3311 Walnut Street, before locating at 3604
Walnut Street. In
1920 Sigma Chi took possession of the Frances Drexel and James W. Paul
house at 3809 Locust Walk and has remained in that great brick mansion
to the present time.
The 1940 edition of The Record stated that Sigma Chi, Phi Delta
Theta, and Beta Theta Pi formed "the famous Miami Triad," a
reference to the Ohio university where each was born. Historians of American
fraternities often compare the significance of the Miami Triad to the
"Triad" of fraternities that formed at Union College in the
mid 1820s. By 1940 Sigma Chi had ninety-seven active chapters and the
national organization published two magazines. Penn's Phi Phi chapter
published its own magazine, "The Quaker Sig" at the close of
each academic year.
Milestones in Phi Phi’s History at Penn
Chartered – September 27th, 1875
34th installed chapter of Sigma Chi
20th oldest in consecutive active years
5th oldest Fraternity at The University of Pennsylvania
4th oldest in consecutive active years
…
c1855
– Anthony J. Drexel purchases the Freeman estate (consisting of the
western 2/3 of the block bounded by Locust/39th/Walnut/ and 38th Sts.)
demolishes the existing mansion and builds his own at 39th and Walnut.
(Currently home to the U of P Fels Center of Government)
1844 –
A.J. Drexel builds the house at 3809 Locust for his daughter, Frances
Drexel and son-in-law, James W. Paul. The architect of 3809 Locust is
T. Roney Williamson, and the style may be characterized as Queen Ann,
with embellishments including: a rusticated sandstone base, a
culminating in the sculpted dragon perched above Locust Walk.
c1890
– A.J. Drexel commissions the Wilson Brothers to design a home at the
corner of 39th and Locust for his son, George Child’s Drexel. Legend
has it that a tunnel used to connect the Locust Street houses for
purposes of serving food prepared in the original kitchen at 3809’s
basement. (Alpha Tau Omega fraternity now occupies the home at 39th and
Locust.
1875 – The Phi Phi Chapter of Sigma Chi Fraternity is chartered at the University of Pennsylvania.
1912 – The Sigma Chi Club of Philadelphia is incorporated as a legal entity in Pennsylvania.
1920 – The Sigma Chi Club of Philadelphia acquires the property at 3809 Locust Walk from the Drexel
family and commences oversight of an 80 year continuing residence for the Phi Phi Chapter of
Sigma Chi
1975 – Phi Phi marks its 100th year at Penn, with a house rededication including extensive renovation and
restoration throughout the ground floor common areas and private bedroom floors.
1985
– Extensive renovations and structural rehabilitation are conducted in
the basement; highlighted by a new stair hall to the basement, stained
glass window-wall restoration and a new chapter meeting room is
constructed below the dining room.
1995 – Consul’s bedroom
restored and upgraded as demonstration project for all bedrooms.
Prototypical design features new insulated windows, oak flooring with
walnut trim, upgraded and concealed electrical wiring, fire protection
systems and new internet connection.
2000 – Phi Phi Chapter’s
125th Anniversary at the University of Pennsylvania. Extensive bedroom
renovations and exterior restorations are planned to restore the
chapter house’s viability for current and future brothers.