Pi Delta Theta
Pi Delta Theta was a national collegiate sorority operating in the United States from February 14, 1926, until it was absorbed by Delta Sigma Epsilon in September 1941.
History
Prior to its formation, the sorority had help in 1925 from Ida Shaw Martin of the Sorority Service Bureau, who had been fielding requests for information from recently formed local sororities seeking national affiliation. She invited representatives of three organizations to send their faculty advisors to a meeting in Boston, Massachusetts in the summer of 1925. Two responded affirmatively, which constitute both the founders and founding chapters of Pi Delta Theta:- Mrs. Robert E. Brown, Kappa Theta Alpha of Miami University of Ohio
- Miss Beulah Houlton, Zeta Sigma Alpha of Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia
Pi Delta Theta was a member of the Association of Education Sororities, an NPC predecessor. The merger of Pi Delta Theta and Delta Sigma Epsilon was the only merger to occur within AES organizations.
Fifteen years later, in 1956 Delta Sigma Epsilon would itself merge with Delta Zeta.
Symbols
- The badge consisted of the Greek letters Π and Θ in gold with a Δ set with pearls overlaying the other two letters.
- Colors were white, gold with myrtle green.
- The flower of Pi Delta Theta was the marguerite.
- The Sorority publications were the Thalia, which was published twice a year and the Myrsine which was published by the ex-collegio chapters four times a year.
Governance