
WHO IS PIKE? -- HISTORY
Pi Kappa Alpha International Fraternity is a Greek
letter, secret, college, social fraternity. It is composed of men who
share similar ideals of friendship, truth, honor, and loyalty. The
Fraternity's ideals are expressed in the written words and symbols of a
secret ritual. These ideals and members' ability to maintain the visions
of the Fraternity's founders are the great moral legacy of Pi Kappa Alpha.

Pi Kappa Alpha was founded at the University of
Virginia on March 1, 1868. At the time, the University of Virginia was the
fifth largest school in the United States. Only Harvard, Yale, Cornell and
Michigan were bigger. The University of Virginia is considered the first
truly American state university because it was the first to be established
totally free from religious control.
It all
started in Room 47 West Range when Frederick Southgate Taylor turned to
Littleton Waller Tazewell, his cousin and roommate, for help in starting a
new fraternity. Also present was James Benjamin Sclater, Jr., a schoolmate
of Tazewell, and Sclater's roommate Robertson Howard. Those four men voted
to add a fifth to their group and chose Julian Edward Wood. Although
history is unclear, William Alexander, probably a friend of Sclater, Jr.,
was proposed for membership and was admitted as a founder. The first
initiate was Augustus Washington Knox.
The essence of the Founders' vision for Pi Kappa
Alpha can be found in its Preamble. A committee was first suggested by
Brother William Alexander "to draw up a statement of the origin and
the organization of the Fraternity." The committee was composed of
brothers Robertson Howard and Littleton Waller Tazewell. The resulting
statement is now referred to as the Preamble.
The years after the Civil War found a proliferation
of American college fraternities being organized, particularly in the
South. Pi Kappa Alpha's founding in 1868 was soon followed by the founding
of Kappa Sigma and Sigma Nu. These fraternities, along with Alpha Tau
Omega, Kappa Alpha Order, and Sigma Phi Epsilon, are known as the
"Virginia Circle".
Before the end of Spring 1868, the brothers had
decided that they wanted more than a Virginia society. They wanted to
become a national fraternity. The following 21 years would prove to be
some of the most troublesome times, nearly shattering the dreams of these
young men. With universities making it nearly impossible for fraternities
to exist by placing bans on the presence of secret societies, the
Fraternity was still able to expand. The second chapter, Beta (Davidson
College), had even voted to disband saying in a letter to the president of
the college, "we have disbanded our chapter and we do not intend to
carry it on unless we can do it openly and above board, as we regard its
ties too sacred for other procedure."
Nearly two years later,
the third chapter, Gamma
(William & Mary), was established.
During the years
that followed until 1889, there would be a total of ten charters granted; however, only
five remained active. This was the year of a most important convention. The Hampden-Sydney
Convention brought the likes of Theron Hall
Rice, a transfer to Virginia from Southwestern, who represented Alpha; Howard Bell Arbuckle, a recent graduate
and then a teaching fellow at Hampden-Sydney, who represented Iota; and John Shaw Foster, a delegate from Theta
Chapter at Southwestern (now Rhodes College). Lambda at the Citadel was to have been
represented by Robert Adger Smythe, but
a telegram from Charleston explained, "no holiday given us. Impossible to come. Act
for us in everything." This convention is of major importance, as it is considered
the rebirth of the Fraternity. Together, Theron Rice, Howard Arbuckle, Robert Smythe, and
John Foster came to be known as the Junior Founders.
Another pivotal event
in the Fraternity's history is the 1933 Troutdale Convention. At this
meeting, the national organization was restructured. Former national
officer titles were replaced with simple ones, the number of national
officers was increased, and the Fraternity established the executive
secretary (later executive director, now executive vice president) as a
paid professional administrator. The year marked the end of direct
regular service by two junior founders, Arbuckle and Smythe. The period
of the Junior Founders had passed and Pi Kappa Alpha looked forward to a
new generation of leaders.