The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity was founded in Tuscaloosa, Alabama at the University of Alabama on March 9, 1856.
It was founded by eight young men. The leader of the group was Noble Lesile DeVotie. The other seven young men were: Nathan Elams Cockrell, Samuel Marion Dennis, John Barratt Rudulph, Abner Edwin Patton, Wade Foster, Thomas Chappell Cook, and John Webb Kerr.
During the Civil War, six of the seven living founders enlisted in the Confederate Army. Three of the six men who served in the Civil War gave their lives to the Southern cause.
By the outbreak of the Civil War the Alabama Mu, or the first chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, had initiated fourteen men. Every one of these fourteen initiates served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; ten of the fourteen men lost their lives in the Civil War.
The interest group was established early in 1946 by 12 interested students, many of them returning veterans from WWII. The group met at the College YMCA to begin discussions to form the colony. |
In August of 1947 word came from the 91st SAE Convention that the delegates voted to approved the charter and the colony would be known as North Carolina Alpha. |
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