Alpha Kappa Lambda was founded on April 22, 1914, by a group of young men attending the
University of California, Berkeley. Its birth, however, dates back to 1906 when a group of friends, the
Los Amigos Club, discussed the "need of Christian men for a place to live and study that was within their [financial] means." These eleven men celebrated as the fraternity's founders, were William Barnum, Herman Ritchie Bergh, Charles Junius Booth, Gail Cleland, Leonard Herington Day, Allen Holmes Kimball, Harry Levi Osborne, Charles Oscar Perrine, Ludwig Rehfuess, Harold Alonzo Savage, and Joseph Leon Taylor After assisting in the cleanup of the
1906 San Francisco earthquake, four of the group re-addressed their desire to organize a house club during a
YMCA conference in Pacific Grove, California. They formed Los Amigos in , a house club named from the Spanish translation of "The Friends." Shortly after, seven more men joined Los Amigos. The club adopted its Greek letter name Alpha Kappa Lambda on April 22, 1914. The fraternity contemplated an early expansion program and adjusted its operational model into a more permanent fraternal association model. However, its growth was put on hiatus by
World War I. After the war, active members and alumni focused on expansion, establishing
Beta chapter at
Stanford, followed by chapters at several Midwestern universities. The fraternity joined
NIC in 1930. The
Great Depression and
World War II disrupted the geographic expansion of the fraternity until 1949 when it hired its first full-time employee. Expansion resumed with an aggressive plan in 1950. Alpha Kappa Lambda became a senior member of NIC in 1954. The fraternity has eliminated Hell Week, personal duties by pledges, and hazing. ==Symbols==