National History
Colby
College in Waterville, Maine, was the first college in New England to
admit women on an equal basis with men students. The first woman student
was admitted in 1871, and for two years Mary Caffrey Low was the only
woman student at Colby College. In 1873, four more young women from
Maine, Elizabeth Gorham Hoag, Ida Fuller, Frances Mann, and Louise Helen
Coburn were admitted to Colby and the five young women found themselves
frequently together. During the school year of 1873-74, the five young
women decided to form a literary and social society. They were told by
the college administration that they needed to present a constitution
and bylaws with a petition requesting permission to form Sigma Kappa
Sorority. They began work during that year with an eager glow of
enthusiasm. Their purpose at the outset was that the sorority should
become what it is now, a national organization of college women. On
November 9, 1874, the five young women received a letter from the
faculty approving their petition. Thus, this date has since been
considered our Founders' Day.
In our first constitution, chapter membership was limited to 25. The
original group was known as Alpha chapter and as our sorority grew, Beta
chapter and Gamma chapter were also established at Colby College. Early
records indicate that the groups met together; but in 1893, the Sigma
Kappa members decided intramural expansion was not desirable. They voted
to fill Alpha chapter to the limit of 25 and to initiate no more into
Beta and Gamma chapters. Eventually, the second and third chapters would
vanish from Colby campus. Finally Sigma Kappas realized if the
organization was going to continue to grow, it had to expand beyond the
walls of Colby College.
In 1904, Delta chapter was installed at Boston University. Elydia Foss
of Alpha chapter had transferred to Boston and met a group of women who
refused to join any of the other groups on campus. When asked if Sigma
Kappa was a national organization, Elydia replied, "No, but it is
founded on a national basis." Elydia then took the necessary steps to
make Sigma Kappa a national sorority and it was incorporated in the
state of Maine on April 19, 1904. The new status as a national sorority
made Sigma Kappa eligible to join what was then called the
Interfraternity Conference, now known as the National Panhellenic
Conference.