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History
The story of Sigma Nu began during the
period following the Civil War, when a Confederate veteran
from Arkansas enrolled at the Virginia Military Institute in
Lexington Virginia. That cadet was James Frank Hopkins, and
it is to him and two of his classmates that Sigma Nu owes
its existence. When Hopkins enrolled at VMI, the south was
in a state of turmoil and just beginning to recover from the
devastating military defeat it had suffered. The Virginia
Military Institute was highly recognized for its civil
engineering program and the South badly needed to repair its
bridges and railroads. At the Institute cadets suffered, not
only of the ravages of war and a disrupted homelife, but
because of the system of physical harassment imposed on
lower classmen by their fellow students in the upper
classes.
Hopkins had experienced military
subservience during the war, and was willing to tolerate a
reasonable amount of constraint intended to induce
discipline. However, Hopkins was unwilling to accept any
amount of hazing then being allowed at VMI. Not one ounce of
hazing was he willing to suffer and he was doggedly adamant
about eliminating it.
Hopkins soon was joined by two
classmates and close friends who were also equally unhappy
with the hazing situation. They were Greenfield Quarles,
from Arkansas, a Kentuckian by birth, and James McIlvaine
Riley from St. Louis, Missouri. These three men began a
movement to completely abolish the hazing system at VMI.
Their efforts climaxed on a moonlit October night in 1868,
presumably following Bible study at the superintendent's
home, when the three met at a limestone outcropping on the
edge of the VMI parade ground. Hopkins, Quarles and Riley
clasped hands on the Bible and gave their solemn pledge to
form a brotherhood of a new society they called the Legion
of Honor.
The vows taken by these three Founders
bound them together to oppose hazing at VMI and encouraged
the application of the Principle of Honor in all their
relationships. That the founders should adopt Honor as a
guiding principle was a natural move since a rigid code of
Honor was already an established traditon of the VMI Corps
of Cadets. The Honor system at VMI required each cadet to
conform to the duty imposed by his conscience that each act
be governed by a high sense of Honor.
Creed
"To
believe in the life of Love, To walk in the way of Honor, To
serve in the light of Truth -- this is the Life, the Way,
and the Light of Sigma Nu -- this is the Creed of our
Fraternity."

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