Each year at Yale University
during the 1840's, certain members of the sophomore class were elected
to two junior societies, Alpha Delta Phi and Psi Upsilon. In the spring
of 1844, due to undergraduate politics and a division in the sophomore
class, a number of men of high character and scholastic attainment did
not receive bids from the two societies. So unfair, in fact, were the selections
that some men who did receive bids promptly rejected them.
On Saturday, June 22, 1844, fifteen
Yale sophomores, rejecting the status quo, met and formed a new junior
society which they called Delta Kappa Epsilon. Very quickly DKE became
more than just another junior society. Its predecessors' criterion of academic
distinction, while still highly respected, was expanded to include the
qualities of good fellowship and compatible tastes and interests and thus
attracted a wider range of prospective members. More fraternal than its
rival societies, DKE proceeded to recruit men who combine "in equal proportions
the gentleman, the scholar, and the jolly good fellow" -- criteria which
have remained unchanged to this day.
We are proud of our fraternity and
the more than 70,000 men who have become our brothers since DKE was founded
in 1844. Dekes come from every walk of life. Many have gone on to distinguish
themselves in politics, the arts, sciences, sports, education, and the
humanities. Four U.S. Presidents have been Dekes, the most of any fraternity.
The first man to reach the North Pole was a Deke and a Deke has carried
our flag to the moon. In every corner of the world you will meet fellow
Dekes, but whatever their background or station in life, all are united
by the shared experience of membership in DKE.
"Friends from the heart,
forever."