| History of Phi
Beta Kappa
The following information was provided by a Phi Beta Kappa
newsletter.
Founded in 1776 at The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg,
Va., Phi Beta Kappa is the nation's oldest honorary society, with
chapters at 270 of the foremost institutions of higher education
across the country. One cannot "apply" for membership. Almost
all members are elected by the chapters from candidates for degrees
in liberal arts and sciences, usually from the top-10 percent of
the graduating class.
The Society was the first to adopt Greek letters for a name and
to introduce the features that have characterized such organizations
ever since, including an oath of secrecy (discarded long ago), mottoes
in Latin and Greek, a code of laws, and an elaborate form of imitation.
The Society's name is formed by the first letters of the phrase
Philosophia Biou Kybernetes, Philosophy (wisdom) is the Guide
of Life. In line with Cardinal Newman's conviction that the test
of education lies not in what people know but in what they are,
the objectives of humane learning encouraged by Phi Beta Kappa include
not merely knowledge but also intellectual honesty and tolerance,
a broad range of intellectual interests, and understanding.
Phi Beta Kappa members have always had an influence that far outweighed
their numbers. Among the first 50 members of the Society were leaders
in the American Revolution, delegates to the Constitutional Convention
in 1788, and members of the Continental Congress and the U.S. Congress.
Two of the founders became U.S. senators, and two became members
of the Supreme Court - Chief Justice John Marshall and Bushrod Washington.
Sixteen U.S. presidents are counted among the membership. Six
were elected as undergraduates (John Quincy Adams, Chester A. Arthur,
Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, George Bush and Bill Clinton);
the rest of the 16 were elected as alumni or honorary members. Eleanor
Roosevelt, elected to honorary membership in 1941, is the only Phi
Beta Kappa first lady.
Among other notables of American history who have earned the coveted
key are Alexander Graham Bell, Cyrus McCormick, Charles Evans Hughes,
Pearl Buck, Henry W. Longfellow, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry James,
Helen Keller, Helen Wills Moody, Paul Robeson, George Santayana,
William Henry Seward, Booker T. Washington, Daniel Webster, and
Eli Whitney.
The first chapters founded after the initial one in Williamsburg
were at Harvard and Yale. Other chapters gradually were added over
the years, but the number nationwide stood at only 25 in 1883, when
the National Council of the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa was
created to prepare the Society for a century of vitality and growth
to follow, documented by historian Richard N. Current in his book
Phi Beta Kappa in American Life (1990).
Every three years, the Society's governing body considers applications
from institutions desiring to establish chapters, and a handful
of the best are usually approved at each triennial Council.
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