Alpha Chi Sigma Fraternity, founded December 11, 1902, at the University of Wisconsin, is comprised of a membership limited to upperclassmen majoring in some field of pure or applied chemistry. The objects of the Fraternity are:
To bind its members with a tie of true and lasting friendship.
To strive for the advancement of chemistry both as a science and as a profession.
To aid its members by every honorable means in the attainment of their ambitions as chemists throughout their mortal lives.
At first, the only stated qualifications for
membership were that the candidate be of high moral
character and pursuing a career in a chemical science. Like
all fraternities of its day, it assumed that its membership
would be white, protestant and male. Wording was soon added
to the Bylaws to keep it that way. Times changed, and Alpha
Chi Sigma strove to stay ahead of its time. The first
restrictions to be removed from the Bylaws came in 1948,
making Jewish chemists eligible for membership. All racial
restrictions were removed in 1954, well in advance of the
race-troubled 60s. Women became eligible for membership in
1971, several years before federal law would have required
such changes. Final wording changes were made to the
Constitution in 1986, making it clear that once again the
only eligibility requirements be that the person be an
upperclassman, majoring in a chemistry-related field.
Expansion of the fraternity began only a year after its
founding, as contacts were made with chemistry students at
the University of Minnesota. Beta Chapter, at that
university, was chartered in May of 1904, but went inactive
almost immediately. The demise of Beta Chapter caused Alpha
Chapter to concentrate more on organization and the
development of a truly national expansion program. The
improved expansion effort proved successful with the
addition of Gamma Chapter at Case School of Applied Science
in 1906 and Delta Chapter at Missouri in 1907. During 1908,
Beta Chapter was reactivated with chapters added at
Illinois, Colorado and Nebraska. Alpha Chi Sigma expanded
across the country, from M.I.T. to U.C.L.A., from Texas to
Montana. The latest chapter to be added to the Fraternity is
Gamma Lambda, at Southeastern Oklahoma State University in
1996. Unfortunately not all chapters stood the test of time.
For one reason or another, some chapters have gone inactive.
The anti-fraternity sentiment of the late 60s took a toll on
all greek-letter organizations, even professional
fraternities like Alpha Chi Sigma. Of the 83 institutions
where Alpha Chi Sigma Chapters have been established, 42 are
active as of July 1996.
As its collegiate members graduated and moved into industry
or academia, alumni came together and formed chapters of
their own. The Chicago Alumni Chapter was the first such
chapter, being formed in 1910. Washington, D. C followed in
1911 and St. Louis in 1913. The alumni chapters caught the
attention of the Supreme Council which tried to work out a
way to make them a part of the fraternity. At the 1916
Conclave, legislation was passed authorizing the Supreme
Council to create Active Alumni Chapters with all the
privileges of collegiate chapters, except for the initiation
of new members. Early efforts of the Supreme Council in
organizing the Alumni Chapters were not well received by the
alumni, with several misunderstandings and many hard
feelings. Eight of the Alumni Chapters, determined to
resolve the problem, sent representatives to the 1922
Conclave. These representatives met apart from the regular
Conclave and worked out the details of integrating the
alumni with the rest of the Fraternity. Their
recommendations created two branches of the fraternity, the
Collegiate Branch and the Professional Branch. Each branch
was to have a vice president dedicated to their own
interests. The reorganization of the Supreme Council created
the offices of Grand Professional Alchemist and Grand
Collegiate Alchemist while eliminating the offices of Grand
Vice Master Alchemist and Grand Alumnus. For a period of
time, the Professional Branch flourished. By 1941, there
were 25 active Professional Chapters compared to 46
Collegiate Chapters. During the late 60s and early 70s the
Professional Branch began to decline to a point where in
1984 only six Professional Chapters were represented at
Conclave. In order to restore Professional Branch
representation in the Grand Chapter and to stimulate
interest among the Alumni, the 1984 Conclave established the
office of Professional Representative. Professional
Representatives are at-large representatives, elected to
two-year terms by the Professional Branch. The number of
Professional Representatives is limited to 20% of the number
of active Collegiate Chapters.
As part of its charge to advance chemistry as a science and
as a profession, Alpha Chi Sigma took on a leadership role
in the recognition of chemistry-related achievements. The
American Chemical Society's Award in Pure Chemistry was
established in 1931, but was about to be dropped 1940 due to
a lack of sponsorship. Upon hearing this, Alpha Chi Sigma
took sponsorship of the award and has maintained it ever
since. To go along with the ACS award, in 1965 the Supreme
Council began negotiations with the American Institute of
Chemical Engineers to create the Alpha Chi Sigma Award in
Chemical Engineering Research. Both these awards are
currently funded by the Alpha Chi Sigma Educational
Foundation, a non-profit, charitable organization,
independent of Alpha Chi Sigma Fraternity. The Educational
Foundation began as a device for the Los Angles Professional
Chapter to solicit tax-exempt donations to fund their awards
program. In 1958, the Foundation was incorporated in the
state of California for just that purpose. Later the
Foundation was expanded to cover more of the fraternity's
awards programs. At the same time, the fraternity sought and
received tax-exempt status, making contribution to both the
Fraternity and the Foundation tax deductible.
Now, as Alpha Chi Sigma enters its second century, it
remains the nation's only professional chemistry fraternity.
Its goals and ideals remain virtually unchanged, but its
makeup and methods are still undergoing transmutation.
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See the
National Homepage for the most current copy of this
history.
The above was provided by Grand Historian
D. Mitch Levings,
Beta Delta '75, OA.
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