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On December 5, 1776, a group of young men, students of the College of
William and Mary in Virginia, meeting in the Apollo Room of the Raleigh
Tavern, Williamsburg, formed the Phi Beta Kappa Society, which they
dedicated to high purposes with eighteenth-century eloquence.
Establishment of New England branches at Yale in 1780 and at Harvard
in 1781 ensured the perpetuation and propagation of the society.
During the following half century four more chapters were founded:
at Dartmouth in 1787, Union in 1817, Bowdoin in 1825, and Brown in 1830.
Then after a pause of fifteen years a slightly more rapid expansion
began in 1845.
At the end of the next half century of growth twenty-five chapters
had been founded.
The need for a closer unity and greater uniformity of practices led,
in 1883, to the organization of the national body, the United Chapters
of Phi Beta Kappa.
In 1875 the society extended the privilege of membership to women.
In 1926 the one hundred fiftieth anniversary was made the occasion
for raising an endowment fund and for exploring ways of encouraging
scholarship in the educational institutions of the country.
The University of South Carolina chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha of
South Carolina, was installed by the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa
on April 8, 1926.
More recently the National Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa have joined in
the defense of freedom of teaching and inquiry and of the liberal
ideal of education.
The original organization at William and Mary was a secret society,
and the oath transmitted to the first six branches contained a promise
to "preserve inviolate the secrets of the same."
In the 1830's most of the branches followed the lead of the Alpha
Chapter of Massachusetts and repealed the injunction of secrecy.
They retained, however, the medal or key with its symbolic engraving,
and the interpretation of these symbols and other "signs" of the
society has continued to constitute a part of the form of initiation.
The present standard key, except for its smaller size and for the lower
stem added by the branch at Yale, is substantially the same as the original
model of the Alpha of Virginia.
On the obverse the medal bore the Greek letters Phi Beta Kappa,
the initials of the Greek words translated as
"love of wisdom--the helmsman of life."
In the upper left corner three stars symbolized the aims of the society:
friendship, morality, and literature.
A pointing hand in the lower corner symbolized aspiration.
On the reverse the letters, S P, represented the second motto of
the society, Societas Philosophiae.
Below them was engraved the historic date December 5, 1776, and
above them the name of the member was sometimes inscribed.
The "signs" of the society which tradition has preserved are two.
When members met, they greeted each other by drawing the backs of
the index and middle fingers of the right hand across the lips from
left to right, thus, apparently, affirming that their lips were sealed.
They followed this sign with a special handshake formed by extending the
index and middle fingers and by folding in the ring and little fingers.
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