
Eldo Hendricks

Claude Phillips

C.H. McClure

About Phi Sigma Pi
On February 14, 1916, Phi Sigma Pi was founded at State Teachers College at Warrensburg, Missouri and originally named Phi Sigma Pi Honorary Professional Fraternity. The founders were Eldo Hendricks, Claude Phillips, and C.H. McClure. All three of the founders decided that Phi Sigma Pi would be based upon an equal tripod of scholarship, leadership, and fellowship.
In 1921, Phi Sigma Pi became national with the installation of the Gamma Chapter at Illinois' Bradley Polytechnic Institute, and in 1977 women became eligible for admittance into the fraternity after an amendment was made to the National Constituion.
Today the fraternity has 117 active collegiate chapters and 5,000 undergraduate members.
Phi Sigma Pi is a unique mixture of an honor society, a service fraternity, and a social fraternity.
Students inducted into Phi Sigma Pi become brothers of the only national honor fraternity in existence-a true and distinct privilege.
For more information about Phi Sigma Pi, please visit the fraternity's national website.