History
Today, Gamma Phi Beta is an international sorority with more than 128 collegiate
chapters in the United States and Canada and nearly 200,000 collegiate members
world wide. Our international headquarters is located in Englewood, Colorado and is owned
by the Gamma Phi Beta Sorority. Psi Chapter at the University of Oklahoma was founded on
September 18, 1918. The members at OU live in the third house which was renovated in the
late 1980's.
Gamma Phi Beta was founded on November 11, 1874, at Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York,
by Helen M. Dodge, Francis E. Haven, Eunice Adeline Curtis, and Mary A. Bingham. They were
imaginative, courageous risk takers who cooperated unselfishly as they worked to achieve
the same ideals Gamma Phi Beta emphasizes today.
Colleges and universities admitted few women students in the 1870s. In fact, administrators
and faculty members gave women a rather reluctant welcome. They argued women had inferior
minds and could not master mathematics and the classics. In this controversy, Dr. E. O. H
aven, Syracuse University chancellor and former president of the University of Michigan,
and Northwestern University, maintained that women should receive the advantages of higher
education. He enrolled his daughter, Frances, at Syracuse, which in 1874 had approximately
200 students and 10 faculty members.
Instead of joining the two-year old Alpha Phi, Frances asked three friends to assist her
in organizing a society. They sought the advice and help of Dr. Haven, their brothers, the
faculty and members of two existing fraternities. The minutes of their first meeting on
November 11, 1874 state: "Miss Dodge was appointed to draft a Constitution." Frances Haven
and Helen Dodge agreed to ask Dr. Haven for a suitable name and motto.
The Founders met again on November 16 for further decisions as recorded in the minutes:
"The merits of the six mottoes suggested by Chancellor Haven were discussed, and the motto
of Gamma Phi Beta unanimously accepted." They agreed on a badge design for which they had
sought the help of Charles M. Cobb and Charles M. Moss, Frances' future husband. Helen's
brother, a divinity student, suggested the Hebrew word. The jeweler delivered the first
badges on December 16, 1874.
After the installation of Beta chapter at the University of Michigan in 1882, Syracuse
faculty member Dr. Frank Smalley coined the word sorority especially for Gamma Phi beta.
It has been used ever since.
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Quick Facts
- National Founding: November 11, 1864 - Syracuse University, Alpha Chapter
- Historic Colors: Brown and Mode
- Local Colors: Navy and Pink
- Symbol: Crescent Moon
- Local Symbol: Lady Bug
- Flower: Pink Carnation (longest lasting flower)
- Creed: Love, Labor, Learning, Loyalty
- Motto: Founded Upon A Rock
- Object of Gamma Phi Beta: To promote the highest type of womanhood through education, social life, and service to country and humanity
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