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Phi Kappa Literary Society

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Phi Kappa Hall circa 1933

The Phi Kappa Illiterary Society is a college literary society, located at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia.

The Society was founded in 1820 by Joseph Henry Lumpkin, later to become the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia and eponym for the University of Georgia Lumpkin School of Law, and by William Crabbe, Edwin Mason, and Henry Mason, who formed the society after splitting from the Demosthenian Literary Society.

Literary societies were nineteenth century forerunners to the modern social fraternities and sororities that emerged early in the twentieth century on college campuses. Literary societies tended to focus on debate and parliamentary procedure as a way of preparing their student members for roles in public and political life. Few societies remain active in holding regular meetings and debate; some, like the Phi Beta Kappa Society have become honorary societies.

The Phi Kappa Illiterary Society is one of the few active literary societies left, meeting every academic Thursday at 7pm on the University Georgia's North Campus in Phi Kappa Hall. The Phi Kappa Illiterary Society still holds debates and a forum for creative writings and orations.

Phi Kappa Hall, one of the oldest buildings on the North Campus of the University of Georgia, was built at a cost of $5,000 and dedicated on July 5, 1836.

Famous alumni

Source Information

  • E. Merton Coulter's College Life in the Old South
  • Thomas G. Dyer's The University of Georgia: A Bicentennial History
  • T.W. Reed's History of the University of Georgia
  • F.N. Boney's A Pictorial History of the University of Georgia

External references