Phi Beta Mu, International Bandmasters' Fraternity (ΦΒΜ), is an international honorary fraternity for band directors.[1] It was founded in 1939 in Texas.[2]
History
The idea for Phi Beta Mu originated with Earl D. Irons, bandmaster and chairman of fine arts at North Texas Agricultural College (now The University of Texas at Arlington),.irons wanted to honor the dedication and devotion of the school band directors who he felt did work was important but lacked national recognition.[1][2] He envisioned a group similar to the American Bandmasters Association which had recognized Irons with membership.[1][2]
While serving as a guest conductor at the Texas Tech University summer band camp in the summer of 1937, Irons shared his idea with Dr. Dewey Otto Wiley Wiley who was the director of the band camp.[1][3] Wiey convened a meeting with other band directors at the camp, including Carl Sanford Eskridge of Wink, Texas; Clyde Rowe, who later taught in Borger, Texas; George Rucker of Bowie, Texas; and Russell Schrader of Sweetwater, Texas.[4] Cochran, Rucker, and Shrader agreed to assist Wiley and Irons in creating the framework for the organization.[4]
The group met several times that summer in the university's Textile Building.[4] They decided to structure the new organization as a national bandmasters fraternity.[4] Dr. Cohbur O'Neal, a former student of Irons who was an English professor at North Texas Agricultural College, assisted Iron with the details of the fraternity's organizational structure.[4] O'Neal and Irons chose the name Phi Beta Mu, with the subtitle National Bandmasters Fraternity.[4] They also drafted a constitution and oath which were approved by the charter members in the summer of 1938.[4] The charter members were:[4]
Carl Cochron
R. A. Dhossche
Walter S. Dickinsen
Sandford Eskridge
Joe Haddon
Earl D Irons
Robert McCown
Clyde Rowe
George Rucker
Russell Shrader
Richard Walker
D. O. Wiley
The Alpha chapter in Texas held its first meeting in February 1939.[1][2] Dr. Milburn Carey, a 1941 initiate of the Alpha chapter, chartered Beta chapter in Enid, Oklahoma in 1944.[4] Harold L. Walters, an honorary member of Beta chapter, invited Carey to charter Gamma chapter in Indiana in 1946.[4] The three chapters were the basis of establishing a national organization that was organized in 1954, including a six-member national board and officers.[4] Carey was elected as the first national president in 1955, serving in that role for 23 years.[1] The fraternity decided to become an international organization and established an international office in Enid, Oklahoma in 1957.[4] This led to the establishment of new state chapters; chapters were chartered in Graz, Austria and Alberta, Canada in 1975, and Japan in 1978.[4]
In 1976, the National Music Council installed a historical plaque at the University of Texas at Arlington to honor the work of Irons as the founder of the Phi Beta Mu.[2]
For its 75th anniversary in 2013, the fraternity commissioned composer Mark Camphouse to create a musical piece. Camphouse's "Homage to the Dream" premiered on July 21, 2013, at the annual Phi Beta Mu convention, part of the Texas Bandmasters Convention in San Antonio; it was performed by the Greater Dallas Youth Orchestra Wind Symphony.[4]
Symbols and traditions
The Phi Beta Mu name stood for "Life, Love, and Music" which is also the fraternity's motto.[1] Its colors are blue and white.[4]
Originally, the fraternity's badge or member recognition pin consisted of the Greek letters ΦΒΜ on a black enamel bar across the center of four gold spaces of the music staff in a vertical position and closed at each end.[4] In 1954, the fraternity added recognition pins for the international executive committee members and former presidents of chapters.[4]
The fraternity's music includes "Men of Music March", composed by members Harold L. Walters and Karl L. King, and "Hail to the Fraternity" by Irons.[4][2]
Membership
Membership in Phi Beta Mu is through invitation.[2]
Phi Beta Mu presents several awards annually. The Earl D. Irons Program of Distinction is its highest award and is given to highly advanced bands.[5] The Outstanding Bandmasters Award is given to band directors of militaries, universities, and high schools.[6] The Outstanding Contributor Award is given to outstanding assistant band directors.[7] The fraternity also issues the Outstanding Band Student Award.[7]
Phi Beta Mu also inducts members into its Hall of Fame.[3] This highest honor is bestowed on a very limited basis.[3]
Chapters
The fraternity was designed to honor outstanding band directors at the state level, with only one potential chapter per state.[4] Following is a list of Phi Beta Mu chapters.[8] Active chapters are indicated in bold. Inactive chapters are in italics. Chapters are in the United States unless otherwise indicated.