Alpha Gamma was founded at Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee in 1867.[2][1] It was a secret society.[3] Its founders were L. Black, C. N. Campbell, W. G. Campbell, A. B. Goodbar, M. S. Matheny, and W. T. Nixon.[2] In December 1869, a bill was passed by the Tennessee Legislature to incorporate Alpha Gamma Fraternity.[4]
In August 1875, Alpha Gamma held a national convention in Clarksville, Tennessee.[7] Delegates attended from Mercerburg College, Southwestern Presbyterian University, the University of Alabama, and Washington & Jefferson College.[7] A local newspaper reported that attendance was smaller than usual.[7] The chapter at Mercersburg College held a reunion on July 13, 1888.[8]
The Alpha Gamma badge consisted of a golden shield with a globe that was encircled by a pendant with the Greek letters ΑΓ. At its top were six stars that represent the fraternity's six founders.[2][6]
Chapters
Known chapters of Alpha Gamma include the following, with inactive chapters and institutions in italics.[6][2] The fraternity appears to have reassigned chapter names as its roster was updated; the chapter that housed its headquarters was called Alpha chapter.[2]
^The dates for this chapter may not quite line up. Baird's Archive indicates the chapter formed in the late 1860s, allowing it to become the Nu chapter of Chi Phi on February 19, 1872, which seems to be a firm date. However, this would have made the unnamed Alpha Gamma fraternity unit a chapter earlier than its implied order in Baird's. Was it Alpha Gamma's Eta chapter? Could a chapter of Chi Phi have been formed on the W&L campus independently, which then absorbed the Alpha Gamma chapter? The Chi Phi chapter appears to have withdrawn from ΑΓ in 1871, joined Chi Phi, and then gone dormant in 1878.
^During its existence, this college was situated in Clarksville, Tennessee; it moved to Memphis in 1925. It became the Alpha Tau chapter of ΑΤΩ. Before its withdrawal, some of its members split off to form the Stewart Literary Society (local).