Chi Psi was founded on May 20, 1841, by ten students at
Union College. The founding members were
Philip Spencer, Robert Heyward McFaddin, Jacob Henry Farrell, John Brush Jr., Samuel Titus Taber, James Lafayette Witherspoon, William Force Terhune, Alexander Peter Berthoud,
James Chatham Duane, and Patrick Upshaw Major. Chi Psi was founded as a brotherhood that embraces related values that were adopted at its founding in 1841. A revision of the values was adopted at 122nd National Convention in 1963. Chi Psi also embraces the idea of being a true gentleman, by following the definition of a gentleman as put forward by John Walter Wayland's "The True Gentleman": {{cquote In 1846, Chi Psi was the first fraternity in the nation to establish a
fraternity house. This was a building at the
University of Michigan, which was said to resemble a
hunting lodge; hence, Chi Psi now refers to all its chapter houses as lodges. The Chi Psi newsletter,
The Purple & Gold, was first published in November 1883, and was named for the fraternity's official colors. The fraternity's national headquarters is in
Nashville, Tennessee. ==Activities==