Alpha Phi Alpha Founding Fathers(The 7 Jewels)

The founders of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. were no ordinary achievers. Given racial attitudes in 1906, their accomplishments were monumental. As founder Henry Arthur Callis euphemistically stated—because the half-dozen African American students at Cornell University during the school year 1904-05 did not return to campus the following year, the incoming students in 1905-06, in founding Alpha Phi Alpha, were determined to bind themselves together to ensure that each would survive in the racially hostile environment. In coming together with this simple act, they preceded by decades the emergence of such on-campus programs as affirmative action, upward bound and remedial assistance. The students set outstanding examples of scholarship, leadership and success--preceding the efforts even of the NAACP and similar civil rights organizations.
Henry
Arthur Callis became a practicing physician, Howard
University Professor of Medicine and prolific contributor to medical journals.
Often regarded as the “philosopher of the founders,” and a moving
force in the Fraternity’s development, he was the only one of the “Cornell
Seven” to become General President. Prior to moving to Washington, D.C.,
he was a medical consultant to the Veterans Hospital in Tuskegee, Alabama.
Upon his death in 1974, at age 87, the Fraternity entered a time without any
living Jewels. His papers were donated to Howard’s Moorland-Spingarn
Research Center.
Charles
Henry Chapman entered higher education and eventually became Professor of
Agriculture at what is now Florida
A&M University. A university funeral was held with considerable Fraternity
participation when he became the first Jewel to enter Omega Chapter in 1934.
Described as “a Brother beloved in the bonds,” Chapman was a founder of FAMU’s
Beta Nu Chapter During the organization stages of Alpha Chapter, he was the
first chairman of the Committees on Initiation and Organization.
Eugene
Kinckle Jones became the first Executive Secretary of the National
Urban League. His 20-year tenure with the Urban League thus far has exceeded
those of all his successors in office. A versatile leader, he organized the
first three Fraternity chapters that branched out from Cornell—Beta
at Howard, Gamma at Virginia
Union and the original Delta at the University of Toronto in Canada. Jones
also has the distinction of being one of the first initiates as well as an
original founder. He died in 1954.
George
Biddle Kelley became the first African American engineer registered in the
state of New York. Not only was he the strongest proponent of the Fraternity
idea among the organization’s founders, the civil engineering student
also became Alpha Chapter’s first President. In addition, he served
on committees that worked out the handshake and ritual. Kelley was popular
with the Brotherhood. He resided in Troy,
New York and was active with Beta Pi Lambda Chapter in Albany. He died
in 1963.
Nathaniel Allison Murray pursued graduate work after
completing his undergraduate studies at Howard. He later returned home to
Washington, D.C.,
where he taught in public schools. He was a member of Alpha Chapter’s
first committee on organization of the new fraternal group, as well as the
Committee on the Grip. The charter member of Washington’s Mu Lambda
Chapter was a frequent attendee of General Conventions. He died in 1959.
Robert
Harold Ogle entered the career secretarial field and had the unique privilege
of serving as a professional staff member to the United States Senate Committee
on Appropriations. He was an African American pioneer in his Capitol Hill
position. He proposed the Fraternity’s colors and was Alpha Chapter’s first
secretary. Ogle joined Kelley in working out the first ritual and later became
a charter member of Washington’s Mu Lambda Chapter. He died in 1936.
Vertner
Woodson Tandy became the state of New York’s first registered architect, with
offices on Broadway in New York City. The designer of the Fraternity pin holds
the distinction of being the first African American to pass the military commissioning
examination. He was Alpha Chapter’s first treasurer and took the initiative
to incorporate the Fraternity. Among the buildings designed by the highly
talented architect is Saint
Phillips Episcopal Church in New York City. He died in 1949, at age 64.
On May 4, 1923, in St. Michael's Parish Hall, the Alpha Omicron Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity INC was established by 17 great men.
Charter Members of Alpha Omicron:
| Milliard
F. Adams Thomas E. Allison Edward H. M. Allen William E. Beavers, Jr. James H. Cowan |
Beasley
D. Kelley Clarence W. Long William M. McNeill Rufus P. Perry (later became president of JCSU) |
||
| Gaston
E. Dudley J. Riley Dungee, Jr. Ellis E. Gregg Matthew J. Gree |
John T. Turner |