Alpha Delta Alpha

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Alpha Delta Alpha (ΑΔΑ) was an American fraternity that was established in 1920. It ceased operation as a national in December 1934 with six chapters continuing as local organizations, and of these, at least three eventually merged into another national fraternity.

Alpha Delta Alpha
ΑΔΑ
Founded1920; 104 years ago (1920)
Coe College
TypeSocial
AffiliationIndependent
StatusDefunct
Defunct DateDecember 1934
SuccessorScattered
ScopeNational
Colors  Red,   White and   Purple
PublicationThe Cresset
Chapters6 active chapters at dissolution

History

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Alpha Delta Alpha was founded at Coe College in 1920 as a local scientific and radio society, emerging out of a radio club that had existed for the previous decade. Shortly thereafter, it became a national fraternity when it merged with a similar society at the University of Iowa.[1][2]

By 1923 it had shifted focus to become a general social fraternity, adding chapters at six additional regional institutions in Iowa and Indiana. A merger was discussed with Beta Phi Theta in the early 1930's but was not consummated.

The organization was dissolved in December 1934, at a national meeting held in Cedar Falls, Iowa. Baird's notes no single national successor group, However, several chapters continued as locals, sooner or later joining other national fraternities.

The Gamma chapter at the University of Northern Iowa was present for nine years after the national was disbanded, operating as a local fraternity according to that institution's yearbooks. Due to World War II enlistment, by 1944 all fraternity activity on the campus appears to have ceased; no fraternities are shown in the 1944 yearbook; the sororities at Northern Iowa continued in operation.[1][3] On that campus, other fraternities resumed in 1946 but these did not include Alpha Delta Alpha.

The Beta chapter appears to have withdrawn from ΑΔΑ by 1924, forming (or reforming) as a local for three years. Some of its members went on to join a new chapter of Theta Tau on that campus.

In 1935, the Eta chapter joined Alpha Kappa Pi, a national organization that later merged into Alpha Sigma Phi.[2]

Symbols

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The badge of Alpha Delta Alpha was an equilateral triangle, one point down, having a border of 21 pearls. The inner triangle was formed of black enamel with a single pearl, a radio antenna, and the letters Α, Δ and Α.

The fraternity's colors were red, white, and purple.[4]

Chapters

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The Baird's Manual Archive notes the formation of eight chapters by 1932. Active chapters at the time of dissolution in December 1934 listed in bold, inactive chapters listed in italics.[2]

Name Chartered Institution Location Status Notes Reference
Alpha 19201946 Coe College Cedar Rapids, Iowa Active, (local)
   (later, to ΛΧΑ)
[a][1][4]
Beta 19211924 University of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa Withdrew, (local)
   (later, to ΘΤ)
[b][1][5]
Gamma 19231943 Iowa State Teachers College (now UNI) Cedar Falls, Iowa Active, (local) [1][3]
Delta 19261936 Buena Vista University Storm Lake, Iowa Active, (local) [1][6]
Epsilon 19271934 Simpson College Indianola, Iowa Inactive [1][c]
Zeta 19281936 Hanover College Hanover, Indiana Active, (local)
   (later, to ΣΧ)
[1][d]
Eta 19301935 Tri-State College (Trine)[e] Angola, Indiana Active, (local)
   (later, to ΑΣΦ)
[1][f][e]
Theta 19321947 Upper Iowa University Fayette, Iowa Active, (local) [1][g]
  1. ^ Alpha chapter originated out of a Radio Club (local) that had formed on the Coe campus in 1910. After dissolution in December 1934 this chapter continued as a local, then became the Zeta–Alpha chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha, in 1946.
  2. ^ This chapter appears to have fizzled as ΑΔΑ by 1924, straddling the line between social and professional. Some members continued as Chi Delta Sigma (local, professional technology) per the 1925 yearbook, and a few years later some ΧΔΣ members would join Theta Tau, but not all. This appears to have been a consolidation, as Theta Tau's Omicron chapter had already formed by 1923.
  3. ^ This chapter originated as Gamma Kappa Delta (local) in 1925. It appears to have gone inactive at the time of national dissolution.
  4. ^ This chapter originated as Sigma Lambda Chi (local) in 1924. After dissolution, it revived the dormant Chi chapter of Sigma Chi in 1936.
  5. ^ a b Tri-State University was renamed Trine University in 2008.
  6. ^ This chapter originated as Phi Lambda Tau (local) in 1924. After dissolution of ΑΔΑ it became the Alpha Beta chapter of ΑΚΠ in 1935. In 1946, ΑΚΠ merged into ΑΣΦ, where the chapter became the Beta Omicron chapter of that fraternity.
  7. ^ This chapter originated as Delta Chi Upsilon (local) in 1908. It appears to have lingered for some years as a local fraternity after the national dissolution.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Anson, Jack L.; Marchenasi, Robert F., eds. (1991) [1879]. Baird's Manual of American Fraternities (20th ed.). Indianapolis, IN: Baird's Manual Foundation, Inc. p. VIII-37. ISBN 978-0963715906.
  2. ^ a b c William Raimond Baird; Carroll Lurding (eds.). "Almanac of Fraternities and Sororities (Baird's Manual Online Archive)". Student Life and Culture Archives. University of Illinois: University of Illinois Archives. Retrieved 13 Aug 2022. The main archive URL is The Baird's Manual Online Archive homepage.
  3. ^ a b The 1941 Iowa State Teachers College Old Gold yearbook, p.157 notes Alpha Delta Alpha as a continuing organization, seven years after national dissolution. It dropped the Gamma name after the 1934 edition, continuing as a local. Accessed 16 Nov 2020.
  4. ^ a b According to the 1930 Coe College Acorn yearbook, the Alpha chapter was located at 116 South Twelfth Street, accessed 16 Nov 2020. The chapter was included through the 1943 yearbook, with scattered graduates after WWII until 1947.
  5. ^ Noted in the Hawkeye yearbook, 1923, p.306. Accessed 16 Nov 2020.
  6. ^ Noted in the 1931 Rudder yearbook, accessed 16 Nov 2020.