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The following is an excerpt from the Bononia
Docet, our pledge manual:
Stephen Alonzo Jackson was born September
22, 1851. He was left motherless in his infancy and was raised
by his grandmother. A close associate and brother, Francis Nelson
Barksdale, recalled him with these words:
"Gentle as a woman, firm as a rock
- a perfect bundle of nervous energy. His love of the Fraternity
knew no bounds, and his enthusiasm was so contagious that it influenced
everybody who came within his reach. His one ambition was to make
Kappa Sigma the leading college fraternity of the world, and to
that end he thought and worked by day and night, until the end
of his busy life."
During the Fraternity's second Grand Conclave
in 1878 in Richmond, Virginia. Jackson was re-elected as Worthy
Grand Master. In his speech, he expressed his ideal and goal of
an enduring and expanding brotherhoood as he addressed the Order:
"Why not, my Brothers, since we of
today live and cherish the principles of the Kappa Sigma Fraternity,
throw such a halo around those principles that they may be handed
down as a precious heirloom to ages yet unborn? Why not put our
apples of gold in pictures of silver? May we not rest contentedly
until the Star and Crescent is the pride of every college and
university in the land!"
Jackson died on March 4, 1892. His legacy
to the Fraternity included its Ritual, a revised Constitution,
a precendent-setting Grand Conclave, the first southern Fraternity
to extend a chapter to the north, and above all else, a spirit
for expansion.
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