Jewel
Henry Arthur Callis
Henry Arthur Callis was born January 14, 1887.
He attended Cornell University in the fall of 1905, where he worked
part time as a janitor and a waiter. Due to financial difficulties
he was forced to drop out of school in 1907, but returned the following
year. After graduating in 1909 he went on to Rush Medical School and
became a practicing physician, Howard University Professor of Medicine
and prolific contributor to medical journals. He founded Theta Chapter
(1910) and was a charter member for Xi Lambda Chapter (1925), both
in Chicago. Often regarded as the philosopher of the founders, and
a moving force in the Fraternity's development, he was the only one
of the Cornell Seven to become General President. Prior to moving
to Washington, D.C., he was a medical consultant to the Veterans Hospital
in Tuskegee, Alabama. Upon his death on November 12, 1974, at age
87, the Fraternity entered a time without any living Jewels. His papers
were donated to Howard's Moorland-Spingarn Research Center.
Jewel
Charles Henry Chapman
Charles Henry Chapman was born in 1876. Before
attending Cornell he was a student at Howard University. After graduation,
he entered higher education and eventually became Professor of Agriculture
at what is now Florida A&M University. Chapman was a founder of
FAMU's Beta Nu Chapter. During the organization stages of Alpha Chapter,
he was the first chairman of the Committees on Initiation and Organization.
A university funeral was held with considerable Fraternity participation
when he became the first Jewel to enter Omega Chapter in 1934.
Jewel
Eugene Kinckle Jones
Eugene Kinckle Jones, born July 30, 1885, entered
the Cornell Graduate School of Sociology in 1906; after obtaining
a BA from Virginia Union University. A versatile leader, he organized
the first three Fraternity chapters that branched out from Cornell:
Beta at Howard, Gamma at Virginia Union and the original Delta at
the University of Toronto in Canada. Inaddition to becoming Alpha
Chapter's second President and joining with Callis in creating the
Fraternity name, Jones was a member of the first Committees on Constitution
and Organization and helped write the Fraternity ritual. He later
became the first Executive Secretary of the National Urban League.
His 20-year tenure with the Urban League thus far has exceeded those
of all his successors in office. Jones also has the distinction of
being one of the first initiates as well as an original founder. His
status as a founder was not finally established until 1952. He died
in 1954.
Jewel
George Biddle Kelley
George Biddle Kelley, born in 1884, became the
first African American engineer registered in the state of New York.
He worked many years for the New York State Barge Canal, and later
went on to being a very successful tax consultant. Not only was he
the strongest proponent of the Fraternity idea among the organization's
founders, the civil engineering student also became Alpha Chapter's
first President. In addition, he served on committees that worked
out the handshake and ritual. Kelley was popular with the Brotherhood.
He resided in Troy, New York and was active with Beta Pi Lambda Chapter
in Albany. He passed on May 5, 1962.
Jewel
Nathaniel Allison Murray
Nathaniel Allison Murray continued in graduate
work after completing his undergraduate studies at Cornell. He later
returned home to Washington, D.C., where he taught in public schools.
Much of his career was spent at Armstrong Vocational High School in
the District of Columbia. He was a member of Alpha Chapter's first
committee on organization of the new fraternal group, as well as the
Committee on the Grip. The charter member of Washington's Mu Lambda
Chapter was a frequent attendee of General Conventions. He was inducted
into Omega Chapter on December 6, 1959.
Jewel
Robert Harold Ogle
Robert Harold Ogle entered the career secretarial
field and had the unique privilege of serving as a professional staff
member to the United States Senate Committee on Appropriations. He
was an African American pioneer in his Capitol Hill position. He proposed
the Fraternity's colors and was Alpha Chapter's first secretary. Ogle
joined Kelley in working out the first ritual and later became a charter
member of Washington, DC's Mu Lambda Chapter. He died on December
3, 1936.
Jewel
Vertner Woodson Tandy
Vertner Woodson Tandy was born on May 17, 1885.
In 1904 he attended Tuskegee Institute, transferring the next year
to Cornell. Upon graduation, he became the state of New York's first
Black registered architect, with offices on Broadway in New York City.
The designer of the Fraternity pin also holds the distinction of being
the first African American to pass the military commissioning examination
and was commissioned First Lieutenant in the 15th Infantry of the
New York State National Guard during the First World War. He was Alpha
Chapter's first treasurer and took the initiative to incorporate the
Fraternity. Among the buildings designed by the highly talented architect
is Saint Phillips Episcopal Church in New York City. He died on November
7, 1949.