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Albert
Sullard Barnes
Born: January 13, 1869
Died: July 17, 1935
The
son of Willard C. and C.M. (Sullard) Barnes, Albert Sullard Barnes
was born on 13 January 1869 in Franklin, New York. While a student
at Cornell, he and others founded a law organization which became
Delta Chi. Barnes also carries the dubious distinction as the man
who lost the first Delta Chi badge, at a class reunion at Cornell
in June 1916.
After
graduating with the LL.B. degree in 1891, Barnes joined a series
of successful lawfirms in Binghamton, New York. He practiced law
in that city until 1931 when he retired to Franklin.
Barnes
married Katherine L. Hermans of Binghamton on 30 October 1895.
They had two daughters: Marjorie (Mrs. B.G. Durham of Washington,
DC) and Helen (Mrs. John W. Brownfield of Binghamton).
During
the controversy over general vs. law membership, Barnes sided with
the general group. In an interview printed in the Quarterly in
1920, he argued that the fraternity was losing good men by
maintaining the law restriction.
Barnes
was one of only a few of the founders who continued to work
closely with the fraternity. He, along with Sweetland, was a
frequent guest of the Cornell chapter speaking at banquets and
other functions. One of his best known quotations was: "Delta
Chi is not a weekend or once-a-year affair but a lifelong
opportunity and privilege."
In
politics he was a Republican. Other organizations which Barnes
joined include the Masons, the Shriners, the Scottish Rite, and
the Red Men. He served on several corporate boards of directors.
His hobbies included trout fishing and all outdoor activities. He
was a lifelong member of the Franklin fisherman's club. A member
of the Congregationalist church, he was active in the local church
as well as the state convention.
Barnes
died 17 July 1935 in Franklin, New York, at age 66 in the same
house where he had been born. He was buried in the Floral Park
cemetery, Binghamton.
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Myron
McKee Crandall
Born: August 27, 1867
Died: August 25, 1931
Born
27 August 1867 in East Winfield, New York, Crandall was the son of
Otis N. Crandall and Flora (McKee) Crandall. As a youth, he
attended the public schools of West Winfield, Cooperstown High
School, and finally the Utica Free Academy. While a student at the
latter, Crandall met Frank Thomas; they became close friends and
remained so throughout their lives. Crandall and Thomas spent
weekends at the Crandall family farm hunting and fishing. While
students at the Utica academy, the founded Theta Phi Fraternity in
1885.
In
the fall of 1887, Crandall and Thomas entered Cornell to study
law. For several years they shared rooms on East Seneca Street in
Ithaca. Crandall maintained that he and Thomas organized Delta Chi
in the spring of 1889, but the new fraternity failed to meet.
Cornell's
requirements for a student organization and thus was not
officially recognized.Crandall claimed credit for the name Delta
Chi and the design of the badge; it should be noted that Monroe
Marsh Sweetland also claimed credit for the name and the badge.
Crandall
earned an LL.B. degree in 1889 and an LL.M. in 1890. After being
admitted the New York state bar, he associated with the firm
Cookinham and Sherman of Utica, New York, for one year. He also
worked for a law firm in Ithaca. Later he returned to West
Winfield and set up a private law practice.
Crandall
married Gertrude Hiteman in 1894. They had six children, four
daughters and two sons.
Throughout
his life, Crandall was involved in local politics as a Republican.
At the time of his death he was President of the Board of
Education and also served on the Library Board. He was a member of
the Emmanuel Congregational Church of West Winfield, serving as
superintendent of the Sunday School and as a trustee of the
church. He was a Mason and had been Master of the local lodge.
Crandall
died 25 August 1931, two days before his sixty-fourth birthday, in
West Winfield. He was buried in the East Winfield cemetery. At
Crandall's funeral, Albert Sullard Barnes, another founder of
Delta Chi, represented the fraternity as an honorary pallbearer.
It
was not until March 1929 that the Quarterly included the name of
Myron McKee Crandall among those of the fraternity's founders.
Beginning in May 1919, the Quarterly's masthead in each issue had
printed the names of only ten men as founders; then in 1929,
without fanfare and with only slight notice, our fraternity
recognized an eleventh man as founder. In an account of his
travels in central New York state, Albert S. Tousley, Field
Secretary of the fraternity, wrote that after visiting with
Founder Owen Lincoln Potter in Albany, Tousley and several
brothers from the Cornell and Union chapters had visited Myron
McKee Crandall, then in his early sixties, in West Winfield.
Tousley reported that they discussed hobbies with Crandall and
that: "It was the first time in years that any members of
Delta Chi have called on Founder Crandall, and he was mightly
pleased to have us as his guests." Although Delta Chis of the
modern era would not think this observation unusual, the men who
read this passage in 1929 probably pulled up short when they saw
the term "founder" applied to Myron McKee Crandall.
Prior to March 1929, Crandall had never been credited as a
founder. On the masthead of the Quarterly that month, the list of
founders, previously ten names, had suddenly grown to eleven.
Nearly four decades after the founding, Delta Chi had finally
recognized one of the men instrumental in the creation of the
fraternity. Soon after this change, the fraternity's history was
revised to recognize Crandall's contribution.
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John
Milton Gorham
Born: unknown
Died: unknown
Much
of the life of John Milton Gorham is a mystery. After graduating
from Cornell in 1891, he broke all contact with the fraternity.
Throughout the 1910s and '20s, the Quarterly printed numerous
requests for information of Gorham, apparently without success. In
the September 1928 issue of the Quarterly, Gorham was listed as
"missing," as O.K. Patton ("CC") prepared
information for the publication of a new fraternity
directory.Research on Gorham continues.
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Peter
Schermerhorn Johnson
Born: December 11, 1869
Died: September 23, 1947
Peter
Schermerhorn Johnson was born 11 December 1869 in Lock Haven,
Pennsylvania. His father was Joseph W. Johnson, a pioneer in the
oil and gas business in New York, and later Oklahoma. Founder
Johnson attended grammar school at the academy in Claverack, New
York.
Johnson
contributed some of the secret work of the fraternity and penned
the words to the song "Fovens Mater." He is also
credited with the design of one of the fraternity's early symbols:
the hand of humanity reaching for the key of knowledge, and the
poem of explanation that accompanies the design.
Although
he earned a law degree from Cornell in 1891, due to a severe
hearing loss, Johnson chose business over the legal profession.
After graduation, he formed a partnership with his father in an
oil and gas business is Bolivar, New York. Johnson later moved to
Woodfield, Oregon, where he was associated with Andrew Mellon in a
natural gas business. He then operated a hardware business in
Colorado. In 1908, Johnson moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, at about the
time the commercial oil and gas business began to develop in that
area.
In
1914 Johnson married Clara von Gonten of Tulsa. They had no
children.
During
the law vs. general membership debate, Johnson was clearly on the
law side. The march 1920 issue of the Quarterly published his
letter in which he argued strongly for a single-membership
professional organization. He offered his opinion that the law
alumni would not support the fraternity if eligibility for
membership should be broadened to include non-law men. Further he
wrote that a new general fraternity would need a new motto,
ritual, coat of arms, and other symbols. He expressed his hope
that the fraternity could find a way out of the conflict short of
changing to a general fraternity. After the decision in 1922 to
drop the law requirement for membership, Johnson gave his complete
support to the re-organized fraternity.
At
age seventy-seven, Johnson, the last surviving founder of Delta
Chi, died 23 September 1947 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He was buried in
the Oaklawn cemetery of that city.
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Edward
Richard O'Malley
Born: March 13, 1863
Died: May 30, 1935
Edward
Richard O'Malley was born 13 March 1863 near Medina, New York, the
son of Michael O'Malley and Bridget (Whalen) O'Malley. While a
child, he rarely attended school due to the financial condition of
his family. As a teenager, he supported himself by working on a
farm and laboring in a stone quarry. When he was aged twenty,
doctors told O'Malley to give up hard physical labor due to a
congential heart condition. He then began a program of reading to
educate himself prior to entering Cornell Law School at age
twenty-three.
While
a student at Cornell, O'Malley was selected to assist the law
professors working on a revision of New York state law, and he
worked as an assistant in the law library. O'Malley was also
recognized for his debating skills.
After
graduating with the LL.B. degree in 1891, he moved to Buffalo and
joined a law firm there. A stranger in the city, he entered local
politics to meet people and build his legal practice. Making
friends rapidly in Republican circles, he was appointed corporate
counsel for the city. In 1901, he was elected to a two-year term
in the New York State Assembly.
In
1910, O'Malley ran for Attorney General on the same ticket with
gubernatorial candidate Charles Evans Hughes (later Chief Justice
of the United States Supreme Court). The Hughes-O'Malley ticked
won easily. While Attorney General he settled several long-running
disputes between the state and corporate interests. After one term
as Attorney General, O'Malley was appointed to a state judgeship
for several years. As judge or counsel, he preferred to handle
civil rather than criminal cases. On the bench, O'Malley was
popular with jurors because he was careful to explain the jury's
duties without floundering in technicalities. Newspaper reporters
liked Judge O'Malley because he rarely held court in camera openly
hearing all cases in public.
In
1922, O'Malley ran successfully for the New York Supreme Court and
served a ten-year term. He left the bench at the mandatory
retirement age of 70. O'Malley credited his success to "Luck
and an ability to make friends quickly and a sincerity to sustain
these friendships." Edward Richard O'Malley died 30 May 1935
in Buffalo, New York, at age seventy-two and was buried in the
Pine Hill Cemetery of that city. In tribute to O'Malley, former
President Theodore Roosevelt said, "Mr. O'Malley is a mighty
fine exhibit of good citizenship and has made a good record."
O'Malley's
younger brother James (Cornell '02) was "AA"
(international presiding officer) in 1902-3, and he also served as
a judge on the New York Supreme Court.
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Owen
Lincoln Potter
Born: June 21, 1865
Died: May 11, 1934
Owen
Lincoln Potter, a founder of the Delta Chi Fraternity, was born in
Ithaca, New York, on 21 June 1865. After attending the public
schools in his home town, he earned an LL.B. degree from Cornell
in 1889 and the LL.M. from the same institution in 1890. While a
student, he and others formed Delta Chi. Potter was the first
"A" (chapter presiding officer) and the first
"AA" (international presiding officer).
After
graduation he was admitted to the New York Bar. Relocating to
Albany, New York, he worked for the commission on the revision of
New York state law for five years before going into private
practice. In 1901 Potter began a long series of jobs for the New
York state Attorney General and the Governor. These positions
capitalized on Potter's knowledge of state law. In 1927 he
accepted an appointment to the New York Court of Claims where he
served until his death.
In
1895 Potter married Ameka Parcell. They had no children. After a
long illness Owen Lincoln Potter died in Albany on 11 May 1934; he
ws sixty-eight years of age. His death was reported on the front
page of the local newspaper.
Potter's
brother Horace was also initiated by the Cornell chapter.
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Alphonso
Derwin Stillman
Born: April 21, 1864
Died: August 24, 1937
Details
of the early life of Alphonso Derwin Stillman are unclear at
present. Stillman's obituary stated that he was born 21 April 1864
in Grand City, Oregon; however, neither nineteenth century maps of
that state nor Census records show a town by that name. Research
in this area continues.
Stillman
is credited with writing much of the fraternity's ritual during
the summer or early fall of 1890. Later a committee composed of
Stillman, Barnes, and Fred Kingsbury Stephens completed the work.
Stillman graduated from Cornell in the spring of 1891. His
activities for the next several years are unknown.
In
about 1902 he moved to the Kalispell, Montana area where he was a
rancher and an attorney. Active in local politics, Stillman was a
leader in the progressive wing of the Democratic Party.
About
two years before his death, Stillman suffered a paralytic stroke
which left him permanently incapacitated. At age seventy-three,
Stillman died 24 August 1937 and was buried in the Conrad Memorial
Cemetery in Kalispell. He was survived by one son, Adee Stillman
of Kalispell.
Obituaries
and other records suggest that Stillman's first name was actually
Alphonso, rather than Alphonse.
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Thomas
Allen Joseph Sullivan
Born: July 6, 1869
Died: October 26, 1924
Thomas
Allen Joseph Sullivan, a founder of The Delta Chi Fraternity, was
born on 6 July, 1869. Born in Fishers, New York (near Rochester),
he was the son of Thomas and Hannah (Doody) Sullivan, both of whom
were natives of Ireland. The younger Sullivan attended public
schools including the Fairport (New York) Union classical high
school. He was graduated from Cornell in 1891 with the LL.B.
After
being admitted to the New York Bar, he moved to Buffalo, New York,
where he entered a series of successful partnerships. In 1905-06,
he formed a partnership with Frederick G. Bagley, another early
Delta Chi. From 1906 through 1912, Sullivan was county attorney
for Erie County, NewYork.
Sullivan
married Mary Van Ness of Fairport, New York in 1895. They had two
children: a daughter (Katherine) and a son (Kreag). Mrs. Sullivan
died after only eleven years of marriage, shortly after the birth
of their son. Sullivan never remarried nor recovered from the
shock of her death.
Tom
Sullivan's hobbies included fishing, golf, botany, and history. He
was a Republican, a Roman Catholic, and a member of the National
Guard.
Noted
for his Irish wit, he was popular with younger lawyers whom he
encouraged in the law profession.
After
a brief illness, Sullivan died 26 October 1924 in Buffalo. He was
buried in Fairport, New York.
To
this day, Kreag Sullivan, initiated by the Buffalo chapter on 5
January 1925, is the only Founder's son known to be initiated into
the Bond.
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Monroe
Marsh Sweetland
Born: August 14, 1860
Died: February 12, 1944
The
son of George James Sweetland and Hannah Lugenia (Marsh) Sweetland,
Monroe Marsh Sweetland as born 14 August 1860 in Dryden, New York.
He received the A.B. degree from Union College (1885), the LL.B.
degree from Albany Law School (1886), and the LL.M. from Cornell
University in 1980.
Sweetland,
who as a Delta Tau Delta, was interested in fraternal work and
ritual. Like Crandall, he claimed credit for originating the idea
for the organization that would become Delta Chi. He also claimed
sole credit for the design of the badge and for selecting the name
"Delta Chi" because he liked the way the two words
sounded together.
Along
with Founders Gorham, Stillman, Barnes, Crandall, and Potter,
Sweetland was present on the 13th day of October 1890 for the
official chartering of the fraternity.
Sweetland
spent his professional career in Ithaca. He held various elected
and appointed positions including city judge of Ithaca and county
judge of Tompkins county. In the 1917 election, in recognition of
his efforts to streamline court procedure, he received more than
one-thousand write-in votes, without campaigning, for a seat on
the New York state Supreme Court.
In
1901, Sweetland married Georgia Smith of Ithaca. She died in 1929.
They had no children.
In
politics Sweetland was a Democrat who frequently gained
endorsement of the Prohibition Party. Other organizations which he
joined included the Odd Fellows, the Grange, the Masons, and the
Knights Templar. He also belonged to the Methodist Church.
Sweetland
was one of a few of the founders who stayed in contact with the
fraternity. He was frequently a guest of the Mother Chapter,
speaking at initiation and Founder's Day events.
During
the debate over law vs. general membership, Sweetland supported
the general side. "It was my idea not to restrict membership
entirely to law men," he stated in an interview in the
Quarterly.
At
the 1940 convention, Sweetland originated the "hand shake
across the country" to pass the greetings of the Founding
Fathers to future generations of Delta Chi. This custom has
continued into the present at banquets, regional conferences, and
international conventions.
Aged
eighty-three years, Sweetland died 12 February 1944 in Ithaca and
was buried nearby. During the 1990 centennial convention held in
Syracuse and Ithaca, many of those attending visited Sweetland's
grave and placed a wreath of white carnations there.
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Thomas
David Watkins
Born: September 4, 1870
Died: December 25, 1912
Thomas
David Watkins, the youngest Founding Father of Delta Chi, was born
4 September 1870 in Plainfield, New York, the son of John Watkins
and Ellen (James) Watkins, both natives of Wales. Founder Watkins
was the youngest of eight children and was reared on his parents'
farm in Otsego county. After attending public schools, he studied
at the West Winfield Academy, graduating in 1889. As a result of
his academic record, Watkins entered Cornell law school on a total
scholarship. He earned an LL.B. degree in 1892 and an LL.M. in
1893.
Watkins
was admitted to the bar at Syracuse in April 1893. Over the next
years he entered a series of successful partnerships; the most
notable was a one-year partnership in 1895 with Albert T.
Wilkerson, another early Delta Chi.
In
1898 Watkins and others formed a partnership which eventually
became Watkins and Titus, a major law firm in the city of Utica.
The law firm handled affairs for the New York Central Railroad,
and Watkins became recognized for his knowledge of transportation
law.
Politically,
Watkins was progressive and independent. For many years he was a
Democrat. He ran unsuccessfully for the state Assembly in 1894 and
in 1898 he ran for the state Senate losing the election by only 67
votes. In admiration for Theodore Roosevelt, he became a
Republican and later followed Roosevelt into the Progressive
party.
In
1898 Watkins married Corinne Wheeler of Auburn, New York. They had
three sons: John W., Thomas David, Jr., and Wheeler.
Thomas
David Watkins was active in community affairs, including the
Y.M.C.A., the Presbyterian church, and fraternal organizations
including the Knights of Pythias.
After
a brief illness, Watkins died in his Utica home on 25 December
1912 at age forty-two. He was buried in the Forest Hill Cemetery
of Utica. The local newspaper printed the following lines in
tribute to Founder Watkins: "He was respected by all who knew
him, for 'Tom' Watkins was a loyal friend, a zealous attorney for
all clients, whether their cases were small or large, and a good
citizen in the best sense of the word."
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Frederick
Moore Whitney
Born: July 14, 1869
Died : October 10, 1942
A
descendant of a pioneer New England family, Frederick Moore
Whitney was the son of Abraham Johnson Whitney and Marietta (Parmelee)
Whitney and was born in Bethel, Connecticut, located in the
western end of the state. After graduating from the LeRoy Academic
Institute (LeRoy, New York), he entered Cornell's College of Law
in 1889. Whitney graduated from Cornell in 1891 with an LL.B.
degree.
For
two years Whitney worked in Colfax, Washington, constructing a
water works for that city. He returned to Cornell in 1893 to study
civil engineering and hydrology for one year (1893-94). For the
rest of his life he was associated with successful law
partnerships in and around Rochester, New York. Whitney preferred
to represent corporations and handled few criminal cases. He also
enjoyed success in real estate and financial investment.
In
1901, he married Hilda Jessie Fisher of Rochester. They had two
children: a daughter, Helen Hamby (Whitney) Doud; and a son,
Frederick Moore Whitney, Jr. Whitney was an avid outdoorsman who
enjoyed camping, hunting, and fishing. Other fraternal
organizations which he joined include the Masons and the Elks.
Shortly after World War I, Whitney helped reorganize the Rochester
Alumni Chapter and was elected its president in 1919. He was an
Episcopal and in politics, a Republican.
Founder
Whitney died 10 October 1942. He was buried in the Riverside
Cemetery in Rochester, on 13 October 1942, the fifty-second
anniversary of the founding of Delta Chi.
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| Distinguished
Alumni |
Frank
Edward Thomas
Born: September 27, 1867
Died June 27, 1933
Frank
Edward Thomas is a figure of controversy in Delta Chi. Other
founders confirmed Thomas's role in the early development of the
fraternity, but Thomas, have graduated, left the Cornell campus
and was not present on 13 October 1890 when the constitution and
by-laws were adopted. Although not currently listed as a founder,
some students of our fraternity's history believe he should be so
credited.
The
son of Thomas R. and Mary (Richards) Thomas, Frank Edward Thomas
was born in Utica, New York. While attending the Utica Free
Academy, he became friends with fellow student Myron McKee
Crandall. Their friendship lasted throughout their lives. Thomas
and Crandall spent weekends at the Crandall family farm in East
Winfield hunting and fishing. While students at the academy, they
founded Theta Phi fraternity in 1885.
In
1887 Thomas and his friend Crandall entered Cornell to study law.
For several years they shared rooms at 126 E. Seneca Street.
Thomas was graduated with the LL.B. degree in 1889.
Myron
McKee Crandall maintained that he and Frank Edward Thomas formed
Delta Chi in the spring of 1889, but the new fraternity failed to
meet Cornell's requirements for a student organization and thus
was not officially recognized by the university.
After
he was graduated with the LL.B. degree in the spring of 1889,
Thomas was admitted to the New York bar and for a time practiced
law in Utica. Later he joined his father in the wholesale fruit
and vegetable business. The firm later became T.R. Thomas and
Company enjoying commercial success. Thomas sold his interest in
the firm in 1917 but continued as President of the Utica Canning
Company. Along with his commercial ventures, he was also
successful in trading stocks and bonds. He served on the local
civil service board and the park commission. Other fraternal
organizations which Thomas joined included the Masons, the Knights
Templar, the Elks, and the Order of the Mystic Shrine. He also
belonged to the Utica Curling Club
Thomas
married Rose Beltz in 1897; she died in 1920. Thomas died in 1933
and is buried in the Forest Hills Cemetery of Utica near Thomas
David Watkins. The _Delta Chi Quarterly_ printed the following
words in tribute to Frank Edward Thomas (September 1933):
"The devotion of Brother Thomas to the finer spirit of
fraternalism will continue to live. ... His life truly exemplified
the real spirit of brotherhood. His passing is a distinct loss to
Delta Chi, which he dearly loved."
In
recognition of his early influence in Delta Chi, Thomas was
posthumously named to the Order of the White Carnation, one of the
highest honors of The Delta Chi Fraternity.
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Biographies
compiled by:
Stephen Henson, Government Documents and Maps Librarian/Associate
Professor,
Prescott Memorial Library, Louisiana Tech University, Ruston, LA
71272,
Phone: 318 257-4989; Fax: 318 257-2447; E-mail: sdhenson@vm.cc.latech.edu
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