Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Sigma Phi Beta (fraternity)
American LGBT collegiate fraternity From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Sigma Phi Beta (ΣΦΒ) was an American college fraternity for gay, straight, bisexual, and transgender men. It was founded at Arizona State University in 2003.
Remove ads
History
Sigma Phi Beta originated as the Beta chapter of a now-defunct fraternity with similar values, Alpha Lambda Tau at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona.[1] Beta disaffiliated from Alpha Lambda Tau on May 11, 2003. Its members formed Sigma Phi Beta on September 28, 2003.[2]
Sigma Phi Beta's objective was to provide a "uniquely diverse safe space for gay men within the traditional Greek system."[3][4] It held a constitutional convention and organized a national parent organization on July 17, 2005, adopting a constitution and bylaws and electing its first fraternity council.[5][6] Sam Holdren was the fraternity's first national president.[6]
Beta chapter at Indiana University in Bloomington became a colony on November 13, 2009,[7] and a chapter in Fall 2010.[8][9][10] Gamma chapter at Ohio State University in Columbus became a chapter on March 22, 2014.
The fraternity's national headquarters was in Tempe, Arizona.[6] It went defunct sometime around 2017.
Remove ads
Symbols
Sigma Phi Beta's motto was "Believe...And none can hinder thee." Its colors were midnight blue and moonlight silver. The fraternity's flower was the green carnation.
The fraternity's mascot, the heraldic Griffin, was prominent on the member's pin, with two griffins facing each other in blue and green. Its pin was circular, with a white field, encircled in a blue border. The fraternity's logo exhibited the Greek letters ΣΦΒ rendered in white on a blue background, in three linked black circles.
Remove ads
Membership
The fraternity was open to all who identify as male; the first transgender member of Sigma Phi Beta joined in 2010.[11] Sigma Phi Beta required members to be full-time students with a GPA of 2.5 or better.[12] Sigma Phi Beta prioritized gender identity over assigned gender, allowing transgender men to join. By the fraternity's gender policy, members were not required to be legally male or assigned male at birth.[11]
Chapters
Following are the chapters of Sigma Phi Beta.[13]
Remove ads
See also
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads