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Sigma national history
On January 9, 1914, Phi Beta Sigma
Fraternity, Inc. was founded at Howard University, in
Washington, D.C., by three daring, young men. The founders,
Most Honorable A. Langston Taylor, Most Honorable Leonard F.
Morse, and Most Honorable Charles I. Brown, wanted to organize
a Greek letter fraternity that would truly exemplify the ideas
of Brotherhood, Scholarship, and Service.
The founders deeply wished to create an
organization that viewed itself as a part of the general
community rather than apart from it. They believed that
individuals should be judged on their own merits rather that
their family background, without regard of race, nationality,
color, skin tone, or hair texture. They wanted their fraternity
to exist as a part of an even greater brotherhood which would
be devoted to the “inclusive we” rather than the
“exclusive we”.
From the beginning, the founders conceived
Phi Beta Sigma as a mechanism to deliver services to the
greater community. Rather than gaining skills to be utilized
exclusively for themselves and their immediate families, the
founders of Phi Beta Sigma held the deep conviction that they
should return to their newly acquired skills to the community
from which they had come. This deep conviction was mirrored in
our fraternity motto, “Culture for Service and Service
for Humanity”.
With the power, force and vigor of
it’s more than 105,000 dedicated men united in more than
600 chapters across the United States, Africa, Europe, and the
Caribbean, Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. continues to
faithfully perpetuate growth and progress as the
“people’s fraternity” dedicated to providing
service to all of humanity. As our communities change and we
move towards the year 2000, Phi Beta Sigma has become dedicated
to “Achieving Excellence
Through Brotherhood”.
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