The Phi Beta Kappa Society is founded…
December 1776 CE
The Phi Beta Kappa Society is founded on December 5, 1776 at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia by five students, with John Heath as its first President.
The society establishes the precedent for naming American college societies after the initial letters of a secret Greek motto.
The group consists of students who frequent the Raleigh Tavern as a common meeting area off the college campus (a persistent story maintains that a Masonic lodge also met at this tavern, but the Freemasons actually gathered at a different building in Williamsburg; ten of the original members later will become Freemasons).
Whether the students organized to meet more freely and discuss non-academic topics, or to discuss politics in a Revolutionary society is unknown; the earliest records indicate only that the students met to debate and engage in oratory, and on topics that would have been not far removed from the curriculum.