The State Female Normal School in
Farmville,
Virginia (now known as
Longwood University) was the state's first institution to open its doors to teacher education. Eight students, Margaret Batten, Louise Davis, Martha Trent Featherston, Isabella Merrick, Sallie Michie, Lelia Scott, Elizabeth Watkins, and Lucy Wright founded the sorority in 1898. Scott and Wright led the first meetings of their secret society, the
S.S.S. Club, in 1897. On April 20, 1898, these women officially announced the founding of the Greek letter society known as Sigma Sigma Sigma (Tri Sigma). At the same time, Wright's roommate, Julia Tyler, was working to found
Kappa Delta sorority. In the fall of 1898,
Zeta Tau Alpha was founded, followed by the founding of
Alpha Sigma Alpha in 1901. These four sororities were all founded at the State Female Normal School and were henceforth referred to as the "
Farmville Four". Tri Sigma was chartered with the
Commonwealth of Virginia on February 12, 1903. Tri Sigma's first constitution, the Alpha chapter, was adopted in April 1903. A second chapter, Beta, was established at the Lewisburg Female Institute in 1903. It also had two alumnae chapters. Sigma Sigma Sigma was the first NPC sorority to adopt a position statement for gender inclusivity. It now counts more than 140,000 women as members. == Symbols ==