Phi Delta Medical Fraternity (ΦΔ) was a North American professional fraternity from 1901 to 1918.[1] This medical fraternity was established at Long Island Hospital Medical College and merged with Kappa Psi in 1918.[2]

Phi Delta
ΦΔ
The badge of Phi Delta, versioned for Alpha Pi chapter at Loyola of Chicago
Founded1901; 123 years ago (1901)
Long Island Hospital Medical College
TypeProfessional
AffiliationIndependent
StatusMerged
Merge DateJanuary 26, 1918
SuccessorKappa Psi
EmphasisMedical
ScopeInternational
Colors  Black and   Gold
PublicationBlack and Gold
Chapters16
Members1,371 lifetime
HeadquartersLong Island, New York
United States

History

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Phi Delta Medical Fraternity was established in 1901 at the Long Island Hospital Medical College in Long Island, New York.[3][1] This was called the Alpha Alpha chapter. The fraternity created a constitution and by-laws.[3] It was overseen by a Grand Chapter.[3]

In 1902, the Alpha Beta chapter opened at Ohio State University and the Alpha Gamma chapter at Albany College of Pharmacy at Union University in New York.[1] Phi Delta became international in 1904 with the addition of Alpha Iota chapter at the University of Toronto in Canada.[1] In total, sixteen chapters of Phi Delta formed between 1901 and 1912.[1] Each chapter rented a chapter house.[3]

Phi Delta held triennial conventions in Chicago or New York City.[3] Its publication was called Black and Gold.[3][1]

Phi Delta merged with the medical and pharmaceutical fraternity Kappa Psi on January 26, 1918.[2] Before the merger, the fraternity had initiated 1,371 members.[1]

Symbols

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The fraternity's badge was a monogram featuring the Greek letter Φ over the letter Δ, with the chapter letters in the ring of the letter Φ.[1][3] Its colors were black and gold.[1]

The Phi Delta flag was a black pennant with a red Geneva cross in the center; the fraternity's letters are on either side of the cross in gold.[3]

Chapters

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Following is a list of the chapters of Phi Delta.[1][3][4] Inactive chapters and institutions are indicated in italics.

Chapter Chartered date and range Institution Location Status References
Alpha Alpha 1901 – January 26, 1918 Long Island College Hospital Medical School Long Island, New York Merged [a][b]
Alpha Beta 1902–1913 Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio Withdrew (ΦΡΣ) [c]
Alpha Gamma 1902 – January 26, 1918 Albany College of Pharmacy, Union University Albany, New York Merged
Alpha Delta 1903 – January 26, 1918 Wisconsin College of Physicians & Surgeons Milwaukee, Wisconsin Merged [5][6][d]
Alpha Epsilon 1903–1910 University Medical College Kansas City, Kansas Inactive [e]
Alpha Zeta 1903 – January 26, 1918 Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis, Missouri Merged [f]
Alpha Eta 1903–1907 Michigan College of Medicine & Surgery Detroit, Michigan Inactive [7][g]
Alpha Theta 1904–1909 Sioux City Medical College Sioux City, Iowa Inactive [8][h]
Alpha Iota 1904–1910 Toronto Medical College Toronto, Ontario, Canada Inactive [i]
Alpha Kappa 1904–1911 Columbia University New York City, New York Inactive
Alpha Lambda 1904–1908 Dearborn Medical College Dearborn, Michigan Inactive [j]
Alpha Mu 1904 – January 26, 1918 University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota Merged
Alpha Nu 1905–1917 Chicago College of Medicine and Surgery Chicago, Illinois Consolidated [k]
Alpha Xi 1905 – January 26, 1918 Saint Louis University St. Louis, Missouri Merged
Alpha Omicron 1906 – January 26, 1918 University of Illinois Merged
Alpha Pi 1912 – January 26, 1918 Loyola University Chicago Chicago, Illinois Merged [l]

Notes

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  1. ^ Alpha Alpha chapter merged with the Beta Upsilon chapter of Kappa Psi after the national merger of the two fraternities. When the fraternity split into two groups in 1924, it became Phi Delta chapter of Theta Kappa Psi.
  2. ^ Baird's 20th notes this school as a name change to what is now LIU, with the chapter listed as the predating establishment of the school by several decades. This appears to have been an error in Baird's (p. II-98). On another page (p. VIII-42) in the text describing Phi Delta the school is listed as Long Island Hospital Medical College, a small school that was linked on another WP page to a hospital that closed in 2012. The school, however, had a long history by then and became a unit of SUNY.
  3. ^ Chapter became the Omega chapter of Phi Rho Sigma fraternity.
  4. ^ Wisconsin College of Physicians & Surgeons was purchased by Marquette University in 1913. The chapter became inactive when the college ceased operations.
  5. ^ Chapter went defunct when University Medical School closed in 1910.
  6. ^ Although dormant, this chapter appears to have become the Beta Zeta chapter of Theta Kappa Psi, purhaps for the purposes of alumni affiliation.
  7. ^ The chapter went defunct when the school closed in 1907.
  8. ^ Chapter went defunct when the Sioux City School of Medicine closed in 1909. It was absorbed by Kappa Psi during a national chapter merger but became the Beta Pi chapter of Theta Kappa Psi when that fraternity split into two groups in 1925.
  9. ^ There are several similarly named medical schools in Canada. This seems the likely successor school.
  10. ^ This chapter went defunct when Dearborn Medical College closed.
  11. ^ Alpha Nu chapter' merged with Alpha Pi chapter when the Chicago College of Medicine and Surgery was purchased by Loyola University in 1917. Alpha Nu chapter reformed as the Beta Rho (first) chapter of Kappa Psi following a national merger of the two fraternities.
  12. ^ Alpha Pi chapter merged into the Beta Rho (first) chapter of Kappa Psi following a national merger of the two fraternities.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Baird, William Raimond; Taylor, James Taylor, eds. (1923). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities; a Descriptive Analysis of the Fraternity System in the Colleges of the United States, with a Detailed Account of Each Fraternity (10th ed.). New York: James T. Brown, editor and publisher. p. 516 – via Hathi Trust.
  2. ^ a b "Our History". Kappa Psi. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bliss, Richard A. (May 1922). "A Brief History of the Kappa Psi Fraternity". Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association. XI (5): 355. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  4. ^ "Delta Omicron Alpha, Phi Delta, Kappa Psi Merger". The Mask. XV (1): 12–13. January 1918 – via Hathi Trust.
  5. ^ "Wisconsin College of Physicians and Surgeons". Recollection Wisconsin. 7 September 2017. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
  6. ^ Batesel, Paul. "Wisconsin College of Physicians". America's Lost Colleges. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
  7. ^ "Members of Alpha Eta Chapter of Phi Delta Medical Fraternity | DPL DAMS". digitalcollections.detroitpubliclibrary.org. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
  8. ^ Batesel, Paul. "Sioux City College of Medicine". America's Lost Colleges. Retrieved 2023-04-05.