Phi Alpha Gamma
Phi Alpha Gamma | |
---|---|
ΦΑΓ | |
Founded |
March 25, 1894 New York Homeopathic Medical College |
Type | Professional fraternity |
Emphasis | Osteopathic Medicine |
Scope |
National United States |
Colors | Violet |
Flower | Violet |
Publication | The Phi Alpha Gamma Quarterly |
Headquarters |
2039 Ridgeview Drive Floyds Knobs, Indiana, USA |
http://www.phichimed.org |
Phi Alpha Gamma (ΦΑΓ), was founded at the New York Homeopathic Medical College, March 25, 1894, by Thomas D. Buchanan, Thomas F. Davies, Edmund M. De Vol, Robert M. Jones, Brooks DeF. Worwood, Arthur B. Smith and Harry S. Willard. Beta chapter was founded at the Boston University School of Medicine, November 26, 1896. In January, delegates from these chapters met delegates from a similar society called KT, which had been established the month before at the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia, and the societies were joined under the name of ΦΑΓ. The Minnesota and Iowa chapters were formed from the two chapters of a fraternity called ΠKT, established with the view of confining it to homeopathic schools of medicine.[1]
ΦΑΓ had active chapters in New York (Alpha) and Philadelphia (Gamma) in 1947. Preliminary details of amalgamation between Phi Alpha Gamma and Phi Chi Medical Fraternity had been worked out by Dr. Albert Saunders of Phi Chi and these the Phi Chi National Convention of 1947 approved with instructions to the Executive Trustees to complete the merger.[2]
The Phi Alpha Gamma merger was completed on February 21, 1948, when Phi Alpha of Phi Chi at New York Medical College and Phi Alpha Gamma at Hahnemann Medical College in Philadelphia were installed. At the annual Founders' Day Banquet of the Phi Chi Alumni Association in New York, with members from Alpha Mu, Rho Delta and Upsilon sigma attending, 48 charter members of Phi Alpha were initiated by Dr. Jacob E. Reisch. At that same time, seven members of the then existing Gamma chapter of Phi Alpha Gamma traveled to New York to be initiated into Phi Chi. This event ceremonially completed the merger of Phi Alpha Gamma and Phi Chi, which had been agreed upon by the official bodies of each Fraternity.[2]
The ΦΑΓ Fraternity consisted of the following chapters before merging with ΦΧ:[1]
Chapter | Location | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
A | New York Homeopathic Medical College | 1894–1948 | Became Phi Alpha of Phi Chi[2] |
B | Boston University School of Medicine | 1896-1921 | Became Beta Upsilon of Phi Chi[2] |
Γ | Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia | 1897-1948 | Became Phi Alpha Gamma of Phi Chi[2] |
Δ | University of Minnesota | 1897-1909 | School Closed |
E | University of Iowa | 1897-1900 | School Closed |
ZΘ | Ohio State University | 1897-1922 | School Closed |
H | Chicago Homeopathic Medical College | 1897-1900 | United with Λ 1900 |
Θ | Pulte Medical College of Cincinnati | 1899-1901 | Charter revoked |
I | Homeopathic Medical College of Missouri | 1899-1909 | School Closed |
K | University of Michigan | 1900-1922 | School merged with U of M Medical School |
HΛ | Hahnemann Medical College of Chicago | 1900-1918 | School Closed |
M | Hahnemann Medical College of the Pacific | 1906-1915 | School merged with U of California |
IN | Kansas City Hahnemann Medical College | 1906-1916 | School Closed |
The Phi Alpha Gamma Quarterly- annual publication begun in 1902[1]
The badge of the fraternity is a middle phalanx of the little finger of a human hand, mounted in gold, with the letters ΦΑΓ in gold upon a field of black enamel. The color of the fraternity is violet, and its flower is the violet.[1]