Texas Wesleyan University Panhellenic Council

HOME

Panhellenic History | Texas Wesleyan | Recruitment 101 | Alpha Xi Delta | Gamma Phi Beta |
Sign up for Recruitment
| Parent's Page | Calendar | Links
Panhellenic History

  National Panhellenic Conference evolved gradually through a cooperative spirit among women's fraternities.  As early as 1891, Kappa Kappa Gamma invited all of the Greek-letter women's college fraternities (there were seven at the time) to a meeting in Boston on April 16 and 17.  The groups discussed interfraternity courtesy, fraternity jewelry adn stationary and Greek journalism.  A second meeting was planned for 1893 at the Chicago World's Fair, and although some representatives were there, no records exist of the session.
 
  Early histories of women's fraternities contain accounts of "rushing and pledging agreement" or "contacts" among fraternities on various compuses, adn also many stories of cooperation and mutual assistance.  However, no actual Panhellenic organization existed and no uniform practices were observed.  By 1902, it was obvious that some standards were needed, so Alpha Phi invited Pi Beta Ohi, Kappa Alhpa Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Delta Delta Delta, Alph Chi Omega and Chi Omega to a conference in Chicago on May 24.  Although Alhp Chi Omega and Chi Omega were not able to send delegates to this meeting, the session resulted in the organization of the first interfraternity association adn the first intergroup organization on college campuses. (National Interfraternity Conference for men's fraternities was organized in 1909).
 
  This meeting and the next few resulted in several mutual agreements, especially regarding pledging.  Up to this time no guidelines had been set, and women could be pledged to groups before enrolling in college and, indeed, even belong to more than one group.

 
  First called the Interfraternity Conference, the organization has been variously named and renamed the Inter-Sorority Conference (until 1908); the National Panhellenic Conference (until 1911); the National Panhellenic Congress (until 1917); the National Panhellenic Conference (until 1921); the National Panhellenic Congress (until 1945), and finally the National Panhellenic Conference.
 
  The name change is significant to the NPC philosophy because the organization is a conference , not a congress.  It enacts no legislation except for the conduct of its own meetings.  Other than the basic UNANIMOUS AGREEMENTS which all groups have voted to observe, NPC confines itself to recommendations and advice, and acts as a court of final appeal in any College Panhellenic difficulty.  One of its greatest services is providing Area Advisors for College Panhellenics and Alumnae Panhellenics.
 
  The congerence met annually until 1914, when it voted to have biennial sessions beginning in 1915.  While some interim sessions had been held prior to 1971, provision in the Constitution was made at that time for the necessary sessions.  The chairmanship is held in rotation according to each member group's entrance into NPC.

TOP