Beta Sigma Rho Explained

Beta Sigma Rho
Letters:Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΒΣΡ
Crest:File:Beta Sigma Rho Crest, from 1922 Cornellian.jpg
Birthplace:Cornell University
Former Affiliation:NIC
Type:Social
Status:Merged
Successor:Pi Lambda Phi
Emphasis:Jewish, originally
Scope:United States
Chapters:15 charters granted
Colors: Blue and Gold
Country:United States

Beta Sigma Rho (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΒΣΡ) was a social fraternity founded on October 12, 1910 at Cornell University. 62 years later most of its active chapters were absorbed into Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, following a similar course as two other smaller Jewish fraternities that joined that national society.

History

Beta Sigma Rho was originally organized under the name Beta Samach (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΒHebrew: ס), "the Greek Beta and the Hebrew Samach suggesting the application of the Greek society idea to the social and cultural life of the Jewish undergraduate".[1] Founders honored by the Fraternity were:

Beta Samach from the onset was notable by a lack of initiation fees and dues, and was slow to establish a constitution, ritual or the other surface attributes standard to other fraternal organizations. No formal expansion program existed for its first decade even while a Beta chapter emerged at Penn State, and Gamma chapter at Columbia. But by the end of its first decade, growing pressure on the Fraternity's trustees by its members resulted in the establishment of a structure of dues and fees, along with a constitution and new operational program. On April 21, 1920 pragmatic adjustments resulted in a recasting of Beta Samach with a new name, Beta Sigma Rho, around the time of establishment of its Delta chapter at Buffalo.[2]

During the Fraternity's approximate 62 year history it eventually chartered chapters at 15 colleges, including two in Canada.

The Fraternity gradually removed religious requirements from its governing documents, reflecting this change in its ritual in 1950.

Traditions and Insignia

The badge was a shepherd's staff crossed with a sword behind a shield. A plumed helmet was atop the shield, with 13 pearls placed on the circumference, and the letters Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: ΒΣΡ placed vertically. The badge was gold, highlighted with black.

Colors of the society were blue and gold.

Merger

Beta Sigma Rho merged with Pi Lambda Phi on December 12, 1972, whose records indicate the latter fraternity "added 5 active chapters, and merged 2 chapters."[3] At Cornell, the original Beta Sigma Rho house survived the merger, with the Pi Lambda Phi house folding, and the Beta Sig house was renamed Pi Lambda Phi starting the next school year. That Pi Lam chapter folded several years later.

The chapter at Pennsylvania State University's main campus would not agree to a merger with the existing Pi Lambda Phi chapter on the campus, therefore the Beta chapter of Beta Sigma Rho became local fraternity Beta Sigma Beta.[4]

At the merger, Baird's estimates that total membership was 5,380.

Chapters

These were the chapters of Beta Sigma Rho, and where known, their outcomes. Chapters listed in bold were active at the time of the national merger, inactive chapter listed in italics.[5]

ChapterInstalled Date
and Range
UniversityCityState/ProvinceOutcomeReference
Alpha-Cornell UniversityIthacaNYMerged with ΠΛΦ chapter
Beta-Pennsylvania State UniversityUniversity ParkPAReverted to local status as Beta Sigma Beta
Gamma-Columbia UniversityNew York CityNY
Delta-196xUniversity at BuffaloBuffaloNY
Epsilon-University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphiaPABecame a new ΠΛΦ chapter
Zeta-Carnegie Mellon UniversityPittsburghPAMerged with ΠΛΦ chapter
Eta-19xxUniversity of TorontoTorontoOntario, Canada
Theta-Rutgers University–NewarkNewarkNJBecame a new ΠΛΦ chapter
Iota-University of Western OntarioLondonOntario, CanadaBecame a new ΠΛΦ chapter
Kappa-University of KentuckyLexingtonKY
Lambda-Syracuse UniversitySyracuseNYRevived a ΠΛΦ chapter
Mu-University of MiamiCoral GablesFL
Nu-New York CityNY
Xi-City College of New YorkNew York CityNYBecame a local chapter
Omicron-St. John's UniversityNew York CityNYBecame a new ΠΛΦ chapter

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jack L. . Anson . Robert F. . Marchenasi . Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities . 20th . 1991 . 1879 . Baird's Manual Foundation, Inc. . Indianapolis, IN . 978-0963715906 . VIII–5.
  2. News: Beta Samach Changed to Beta Sigma Rho. The Cornell Daily Sun.
  3. Web site: Pi Lambda Phi History . 2020-03-17 .
  4. https://betasigmabeta.2stayconnected.com/ Beta Sigma Beta website
  5. Web site: William Raimond Baird . Carroll Lurding . Almanac of Fraternities and Sororities (Baird's Manual Online Archive) . Student Life and Culture Archives . University of Illinois Archives . 18 Aug 2021 . University of Illinois . English. The main archive URL is The Baird's Manual Online Archive homepage.