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Ohio Omega Psi Phi License Plate Now Available.
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About Omega
On Friday evening, November 17, 1911, three Howard University
undergraduate students, with the assistance of their faculty
adviser, gave birth to the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. This event
occurred in the office of biology Professor Ernest E. Just, the
faculty adviser, in the Science Hall (now known as Thirkield
Hall). The three liberal arts students were Edgar A. Love, Oscar
J. Cooper and Frank Coleman. From the initials of the Greek
phrase meaning "friendship is essential to the soul," the name
Omega Psi Phi was derived. The phrase was selected as the motto.
Manhood, scholarship, perseverance and uplift were adopted as
cardinal principles. A decision was made regarding the design
for the pin and emblem, and thus ended the first meeting of the
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity .
The next meeting was conducted on November 23, 1911. Edgar Love
became the first Grand Basileus (National President). Cooper and
Coleman were selected Grandkeeper of the Records (National
Secretary) and Grandkeeper of Seals (National Treasurer),
respectively. Eleven Howard University undergraduate men were
selected as charter members.
Alpha Chapter was organized with fourteen charter members on
December 15, 1911. Love, Cooper and Coleman were elected the
chapter's first Basileus, Keeper of Records, and Keeper of
Seals, respectively. On March 8, 1912, the previously submitted
fraternity constitution was rejected by the Howard University
Faculty Council. The Faculty Council proposed to accept the
fraternity as a local but not a national organization. The
fraternity refused acceptance as a strictly local organization.
Oscar Cooper became the fraternity's second Grand Basileus in
1912. Cooper authorized the investigation of a proposed second
chapter at Lincoln University, Pennsylvania. Edgar Love was
elected as the third Grand Basileus in 1912 and served until
1915. In 1914, Howard University withdrew its opposition, and
the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity was incorporated under the laws of
the District of Columbia on October 28, 1914. Beta Chapter at
Lincoln University was chartered in February, 1914. George E.
Hall, the fourth Grand Basileus, had been initiated at Alpha
Chapter in 1914. Grand Basileus Hall authorized the
establishment of Gamma Chapter in Boston, Massachusetts.
However, the chapter was eventually established during the
administration of the fifth Grand Basileus, James C. McMorries.
During the administration of the sixth Grand Basileus, Clarence
F. Holmes, the fraternity's first official hymn, "Omega Men Draw
Nigh", was written by Otto Bohannon. Raymond G. Robinson, the
seventh Grand Basileus, established Delta Chapter in Nashville,
Tennessee in 1919. Robinson left office in 1920 with a total of
ten chapters in operation. Stanley Douglas served as Editor of
the first Oracle published in the spring of 1919. Harold K.
Thomas, the eighth Grand Basileus, was elected at the 1920
Nashville Grand Conclave. It was at this Conclave that Carter G.
Woodson inspired the establishment of National Achievement Week
to promote the study of Negro life and history. The 1921 Atlanta
Grand Conclave brought to an end the first decade of the Omega
Psi Phi Fraternity.
INTERNAL GROWTH
In 1922, Grand Basileus J. Alston Atkins appointed the first
District Representatives. Today, there are eleven such officers
who are elected annually by the district conferences/meetings.
In 1922, the office of Vice Grand Basileus was created. The
Grand Keeper of Records became the Grand Keeper of the Records
and Seal. The first Omega Bulletin was published in 1928.
Campbell C. Johnson was the Editor. "Omega Dear" was adopted as
the official hymn in 1931. Two faculty from Howard University,
Charles R. Drew, Professor of Surgery, and Mercer Cook,
Professor of Languages, were the composers. Cook wrote the music
and first stanza; Drew wrote the last two stanzas.
THE FORTIES
The Omega "Sweetheart Song", with words and music by Don Q.
Pullen, was adopted as the official sweetheart song by the 1940
Nashville Grand Conclave. Founder Ernest E. Just entered Omega
Chapter in 1941. In 1941, Dr. Charles Drew perfected the use of
blood plasma as a life saving tool. William Hastie resigned as
Civilian Aide to the Secretary of War in protest against
discrimination in the Armed Forces. He was later appointed
Governor of the Virgin Islands by President Truman. In 1949, the
first National Headquarters Building at 107 Rhode Island Avenue,
N.W., Washington, D.C. was purchased. H. Carl Moultrie, I was
selected to serve as the first National Executive Secretary. In
1949, the scholarship fund was renamed the Charles R. Drew
Memorial Scholarship Fund.
THE FIFTIES
During this era, the thrust was social change. Thousands of
Omega men in every area of the country were actively involved in
the fight to eliminate racial discrimination. An entire book
could be written about this phase of Omega activities. The 1955
Los Angeles Grand Conclave initiated a program whereby each
graduate chapter would purchase a Life Membership from the
NAACP. Between 1955 and 1959, chapters contributed nearly
$40,000 to the NAACP. In the fifties, Omega Psi Phi took an
official position against hazing as a fraternity activity. This
anti-hazing position remains in effect today, and the policy
banning hazing has been strengthened.
THE SIXTIES
The struggle for social justice shifted into high gear. Brothers
were active participants in the "sit-ins" and other
demonstrations designed to call attention to the plight of black
Americans. Undergraduate brothers especially were involved in
the demonstrative aspect of the civil rights struggle. In 1961,
the Washington, D.C. Grand Conclave did an excellent job of
highlighting the fifty years of accomplishments by Omega.
Brothers attended the 1961 Golden Anniversary Conclave in record
numbers. Founders Love, Cooper, and Coleman were present.
Thirteen of twenty-three former Grand Basilei were in
attendance. Young brothers had the once-in-a-life-time
opportunity to mingle with some of the greatest black men that
America had produced. The Golden Anniversary Conclave authorized
$140,000-$150,000 for the construction of a new National
Headquarters Building in Washington, D.C. In 1964, the new
National Headquarters Building was dedicated. The building was a
dream come true and was the first building of its type to be
built by a black fraternity. Founders Love, Cooper and Coleman
participated in the ceremonies. The name was later changed to
the International Headquarters. It is located at 2714 Georgia
Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20001. Robert H. Lawrence (in
1966) was selected as the first Black to serve in the Astronaut
Program. Lawrence had earned a Ph.D. Degree in chemistry at Ohio
State University. Founder Frank Coleman entered Omega Chapter in
1967. The 1968 Charlotte Grand Conclave mandated a
Constitutional Convention for the revision of the Constitution
and By-Laws as well as the Ritual. The Convention was held in
Atlanta in 1969.
THE SEVENTIES
The newly revised Constitution and By-Laws and the Ritual became
effective at the close of the 1970 Pittsburgh Grand Conclave. H.
Carl Moultrie I, Omega's only National Executive Secretary to
this point, was appointed as a judge to the Superior Court of
Washington, D.C., in 1972. Moultrie's resignation was accepted
with regrets. Omega conferred upon Moultrie the title of
National Executive Secretary Emeritus which was later changed to
Executive Secretary Emeritus. The Seventies brought more
unpleasant news. Founder Oscar J. Cooper entered Omega Chapter
in 1972. In 1974, Edgar A. Love, the only surviving founder,
entered Omega Chapter. On November 16, 1975, an impressive
granite monument was dedicated to the memory of the four
founders. The monument is just a few feet away from Thirkield
Hall, the site of Omega's birth place on the Howard University
Campus. A revived Life Membership Program resulted in a very
large number of new Life Members. The 1976 Atlanta Grand
Conclave was the largest in the history of the fraternity up to
that point in time. Many new undergraduate chapters were
chartered, because of the increased enrollment of black students
at previously all-white colleges and universities. "Operation
Big Vote" was successful in getting thousands of black people to
vote in the 1976 election. Many Omegas were active participants.
The 1979 Denver Grand Conclave made a commitment to contribute a
minimum of 250,000 dollars to the United Negro College Fund over
the next five years.
THE EIGHTIES AND NINETIES
In 1981, the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity endowed its first Omega
Faculty Chair. Rust College, Holly Springs, Mississippi, was the
recipient. President W.A. McMillan stated that the Chair would
be used to promote the humanities. The fraternity completed its
250,000 dollars contribution to the United Negro College Fund,
an organization under the direction of Christopher Edley, and
approved a plan to continue the annual gift of 50,000 dollars to
that organization in perpetuity. The fraternity accelerated its
financial support to the National Urban League. Mr. John Jacobs,
Executive Director of the Urban League, participated in Grand
Conclaves on a regular basis. Jesse Jackson, former president of
Operation PUSH and founder of the Rainbow Coalition, attended
Grand Conclaves on a regular basis and received support for
these organizations as well as for his 1984 and 1988 campaigns
for the presidency of the United States.
The Seventy-fifth Anniversary Grand Conclave celebration was
deemed the single most significant event on Omega's horizon. The
dates selected were July 25-August 1, 1986 in Washington, D.C.,
the city of Omega's birth. It was the largest Conclave ever.
Grand Basileus Moses C. Norman, Sr., elected at the 1984
Louisville Grand Conclave, appointed a committee to review the
structure and operations of the fraternity as a means of future
focus. In 1984, John S. Epps was selected as only the fifth
Omega Man to wear the title of Executive Secretary. In 1990, the
title was changed to Executive Director. Two revised methods of
bringing members into the fraternity were approved by the
organization. Pledging was abolished and the new Membership
Selection and Education Program came into being on August 1,
1985. In April, 1991, the new Membership Intake Program was
implemented. Initial plans were begun for the writing of an
updated history of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. H. Carl
Moultrie, I, Executive Secretary Emeritus and Ronald E. McNair,
noted Astronaut, entered Omega Chapter. Don Q. Pullen and W.
Mercer Cook also entered Omega Chapter.
Omega continued to flourish, largely because Founders Love,
Cooper, Coleman and Just were men of the very highest ideals and
intellect. The Founders selected and attracted men of similar
ideals and characteristics. It is not by accident that many of
America's great black men are/were Omega Men. To this date,
there are very few Americans whose lives have not been touched
by a member of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity.
Omega has a rich heritage to be protected, celebrated and
enhanced!
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