Our Roots
A local group of women was formed in 1906, and they officially became the Arkansas Alpha Chapter in 1909 after installation by past Grand President May Lansfield Keller, Maryland Alpha. On December 29, 28 members were initiated in the bottom right bedroom of Arkansas Alpha Mary Campbell’s home on Dickson Street. Celebratory activities took place in what had been the Arkansas building at the 1904 World’s Fair.Collegiate Chapter Leadership
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Caitlin Bradley
Vice President Member Experience
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Amanda Brunell
Director Policy and Prevention Education
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Caitlin Condon
Director Member Conduct
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Isabel Conover
Director Lifelong Membership
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Sydney Crees
Vice President Operations
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Caroline Culpepper
Member Conduct Committee Member
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Kailey DeWitt
Vice President Inclusion
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Faith Fitts
Panhellenic Delegate
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Grace Flener
Vice President Community Relations
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Allyson Frederick
Vice President Recruitment
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Brett Gaffney
Director Community Inclusion
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Anna Garlow
Director PR/Marketing
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Krista Green
Director Leadership
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Natalie Gross
Director Housing
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Brighton Harris
Vice President Risk Management
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Norah Harrison
Director Fraternity Heritage
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Cambelle Hawkins
Director Service and Philanthropy
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Maddie Hawley
Director Social Events
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Emmerie Lewis
Director Academics
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Caroline McKee
Vice President Finance/Housing
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Peri Mitchell
Director New Member Experience
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Mia Risner
Director Recruitment Events
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Kenslee Roberson
Member Conduct Committee Member
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Kenslee Roberson
Chapter President
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Maggie Schmidt
Director Member Finances
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Joanna White
Director Membership Selection
Supporting Sisters’ Dreams
Chapter-specific scholarship funds support collegiate chapter members as they pursue their academic dreams and professional goals. By giving to a scholarship fund, donors can directly impact their own chapter sisters and open doors that might not have been possible otherwise.
When you're with her, you’re home
Pi Phi chapter facilities are where friendships take root, leaders find their voice and sisterhood shines across generations. From memories made over shared meals to the built-in support from late-night study sessions and knowing your sisters are there in both the big and small moments, living in a chapter facility creates a sense of home and belonging within every wall.
Notable Chapter Alumnae
Elizabeth Paisley Huckaby
Educator and Author
Elizabeth Paisley Huckaby
Educator and Author
Elizabeth Huckaby was an educator and school administrator whose firsthand account of the desegregation of Little Rock Central High School became an important historical record of a pivotal moment in the American civil rights movement. As an English instructor and vice principal for girls at Central High, she witnessed the challenges and tensions surrounding the integration of the school in 1957.
Elizabeth worked closely with the six female members of the Little Rock Nine, the first Black students to attend Central High after desegregation. After retiring from education, she published “Crisis at Central High: Little Rock 1957-58,” a detailed account of the events she observed during that historic year. The book offered readers a firsthand perspective on one of the most significant school integration efforts in U.S. history and was later adapted into a film.
Elizabeth was initiated in 1924.