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The Official
Story of Our Founding by the Founder, Otis A. Glazebrook "If my life's history be written, the truth
will be that its most splendid service was performed through
Alpha Tau Omega."  | | Born in 1845, Otis Allan Glazebrook, at the time
this picture was taken, had risen to the rank of Cadet
Adjutant at VMI. He graduated first in his class in
1866. Although he had an early interest in a law career,
upon leaving VMI he entered the Protestant Episcopal
Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia, and was
ordained in 1869. His friendship with fellow Virginian and Phi Kappa
Psi member President Woodrow Wilson led to Dr. Glazebrook's
1914 appointment as U.S. Consul to Jerusalem. Soon
after World War I began, he was made responsible for
the interests of eight nations in the Holy Land. He
remained in the Consular Service and in 1920 was posted
to Nice, France, where he served as U.S. Consul until
he retired in 1929. Dr. Glazebrook died April 26, 1931. | I, Otis Allan Glazebrook eldest child of Larkin White Glazebrook
and America Henley Bullington, was born in Richmond, Virginia,
October 13, 1845, at the residence of my parents, corner
of Second and East Clay Streets, Richmond, Virginia. I was
under private teachers until thirteen years of age, when
I entered the Preparatory Department of Randolph-Macon College
and was there until Virginia seceded, I received one of the
first appointments to the Virginia Military Institute after
the war began, and then went to Lexington, Virginia, and
entered this institution. With other members of the Corps, I was sent to a different
training campus to train the recruits for the Confederate
Army. When the cadets were ordered to New Market, I accompanied
them and took part in the battle. Some months before the
surrender of General Lee the Cadet Corps was ordered to Richmond.
The Corps passed through Appomatox en route to Lynchburg
the time of the surrender of General Lee. After this surrender, the Institute and everything else
being disorganized, I returned to my home in Richmond, and
remained there until the fall of 1865. It was during this
sojourn in Richmond that the thought matured of creating
an organization, to have its starting point from the Institute,
for the purpose of making a fraternal organization of young
men, of a national character and entirely free from partisan
or sectional bias. This thought first occurred to me in the
consequence of an interview with General Smith, the superintendent
of the Virginia Military Institute and afterwards my father-in
law, in which he gave me a letter he had received from a
Northern Greek Letter Fraternity, requesting him, General
Smith, to put it to touch with an influential member of the
Corps of Cadets, in order to further the re-establishing
of its chapters in the south, which had been discontinued
on account of the Civil War, I told General Smith that under
the circumstances I did not feel at that time I could sponsor
the re-establishment of an organization then existing in
the north, and of which I knew nothing personally, in the
south. This ended the matter. I, however, kept this interview in my mind and determined
that at the opportune time I would form a fraternity which
would have for its object the bringing about of fraternal
relations among all college men in the United States, independent
of north and south. Under this impetus I wrote a constitution
and initiation ritual, emphasizing and illustrating certain
fundamental principles of a moral character, upon which I
thought such an organization could be usefully and successfully
founded. At that time I was not a member of any Masonic or
other secret organization. I still had one more year to complete
at the Virginia Military Institute, and it was my intention
at the completion of my Institute courses to take up the
study of law as a profession. However, I was very much interested
in religious matters and a confirmed member of the Episcopal
Church. Having drafted the constitution and ritual in the shape
of a secret work symbolizing the virtues upon which I proposed
to base the organization, I considered the advisability of
associating with me some one or more young men, naturally
turned to members of my own class who would return with me
in the fall to the Institute. At that time Alfred Marshall
of my class was residing in Richmond. He was the son of the
British Consul at Richmond, and a close cadet friend of mine.
Also at that time Erskine Mayo Ross, whose family was from
Culpeper County, Virginia, was visiting Richmond, and although
in the class ahead of mine, was a close personal friend.
He had graduated from the Institute in 1864 and had determined
to go to California to begin his career. As the most available men I invited Marshall and Ross to
my house in Richmond, and I unfolded my plan and asked them
if they would be willing to join me in launching such an
enterprise. After reading the draft of the constitution and
secret work, I requested them, if they approved, to sign
their names after mine to the constitution, which they consented
to do, making no change whatever in the draft of the constitution
or the ritual. I signed first, Marshall next and Ross last.
I told them that I would take the constitution and secret
work to Lexington, and as Marshall and myself were returning
to the Institute at the opening of the fall term of 1865,
we would inaugurate the enterprise by placing the first chapter
at the VMI. Ross, after a short stay in Richmond, went to
California and made it his home. Upon our return to the Institute,
Marshall and I selected from the Corps of Cadets a group
of men who were the outstanding members of their respective
classes. We called them together and informed them of our
purpose, and upon their agreement I read them the draft of
the constitution and secret work, administering the oath
to each one separately, and thus formed the Mother Chapter
of Alpha Tau Omega. My impression is that I suggested that
Marshall should preside as Worthy Master, as I would deliver
an address, setting forth more fully the plan and purpose
of the organization which was in my mind, and which address
was subsequently delivered in the form of an oration which
I believe is today in the archives of the Fraternity. At this time Washington College, a small Presbyterian school
whose property adjoined that of the VMI secured as its president
general Robert. E. Lee, changing the name of the college
to that of Washington and Lee University. This movement on
the port of Washington College was a great success. Immediately,
many of the young men of the south, some who had been officers
in the Confederate Army and others, sons of distinguished
southern men, owing to the prestige of General Lee, matriculated
at this institution. From a college of forty or fifty students
this university now developed into a great school of nearly
a thousand members. It offered a splendid field for our adventure.
Recognizing that the very flower of the south was at this
institution, we decided to organize a chapter there, which
was immediately done, forming the Beta Chapter of Alpha Tau
Omega. Meetings were held by both of these chapters, and
they sometimes met together. I had already made a sketch of a badge, the draft of which
I had made in Richmond, choosing the form and letters and
the symbolism which appear on the face of the badge today.
This badge was accepted without modification just as I presented
it, and the number to meet the wants of the Alpha Chapter
was ordered from the Jeweler Galt in Washington. The first
badge (which I always wore as my pin) was sent to me for
approval, and is now in the possession of my son, Dr. Glazebrook
of Washington. (The original Glazebrook badge is on display
at the National Headquarters.) The two chapters were known respectively as the Alpha and
Beta Chapters of Alpha Tau Omega, the greatest harmony holding
between them, and the greatest opportunity for making excellent
selection of membership was afforded in consequence of the
fact that there were no other fraternities in either of these
institutions, and the young men who formed the student body
of these institutions were the representative young men of
the south. After my graduation I was asked to return to the Institute
the following year as assistant professor, and the same offer,
as did James, but Marshall accepted. Doubtless this offer
came to us because we had graduated first in the class. I
being fortunate enough to take the first place, with James
and Marshall respectively second and third. I declined this
offer as I was anxious to be married, at that time being
engaged to the second daughter of General Smith, the superintendent
of the Institute. I determined Instead of going to the University
of Virginia to continue my law course, to enter the Theological
Seminary of Virginia, near Alexandria, and take the course
in theology. Before carrying out this purpose, I married
Virginia C. K. Smith, and returned to my father's house in
Richmond, where we then lived with my mother. My father having
died a few days after my marriage I remained with my mother
until after the birth of my first child, Dr. Larkin W. Glazebrook.
With my little family and nurse I then removed to the seminary
near Alexandria, Virginia, entering the middle class of that
institution, and being ordained two years afterwards to the
Episcopal Ministry. Being for the first year a deacon, I
was under the complete direction of the bishop of the diocese,
and was sent by Bishop Johns to Brunswick County, Virginia,
where I took charge of two churches in that county. This
county was in an isolated and remote section in the black
belt of Virginia, twenty miles from a railroad, where I remained
for seven years, and was prevented by this isolation from
keeping in close touch with the Fraternity, but which I knew
was being extended along the lines which I had proposed. I was then called to church work in Baltimore, and while
there organized and built the Holy Trinity Church, and I
was in social connection with several Alpha Taus, which gave
me the opportunity of again taking an active interest in
Fraternity affairs. This I did, a conclave of Alpha Taus
being held in Baltimore soon after my arrival. At that time
and on the occasion of this conclave, Marine D. Humes, Joseph
Anderson, Jr., I think, Thomas G. Hayes and others, active
and energetic Alpha Taus, united with me in propagating the
organization. It was my hope that we could place a successful
Chapter at Johns Hopkins University, and the effort was made
but it was not successful on account of the peculiar clientele
of that school. From the beginning of my residence in Baltimore
I again became most actively associated in the conduct and
work of the Fraternity. At the conclave or Congress, if we should so call it, in
Baltimore it was thought well to re-write the constitution
and more fully develop the ritual. The work on the constitution
was committed to a committee, but I requested that the re-writing
of the initiation and secret service should be left to me
alone, and promised that it would be completed in time to
be presented at the next conclave of the Fraternity, whenever
and wherever that should be called. After four years rectorship in Baltimore, I was called to
Christ Church, Macon, Georgia, one of the important churches
of the south, and I invited the next conclave or congress
to meet in my house in that city, which took place in 1880
and is now known as the congress of that year. I began work
on the ritual as soon as I reached Macon, and before the
meeting of that congress had completed in full, it having
been prepared in my study, and had it ready for presentation
at the meeting in 1880, where it was adopted without alteration.
In this new ritual the landmarks of the original initiation
were strictly adhered to so far as the oath and symbolism
were concerned, emphasizing the virtues which were symbolized
in the original draft and which I considered, and the Fraternity
has always considered fundamental, the very moral character
and purpose of the Fraternity being contained in the symbolism
of the first ritual and emblazoned from the first on the
face of the badge in the emblems that have always appeared
thereupon.
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