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Tau Beta Pi Information Book
History
The Tau Beta Pi Association, national
engineering honor society, was founded at Lehigh University in 1885 by Dr. Edward
Higginson Williams, Jr., 'to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon
their Alma Mater by distinguished scholarship and exemplary character as undergraduates in
engineering, or by their attainments as alumni in the field of engineering, and to foster
a spirit of liberal culture in engineering colleges'. -- Preamble to the Constitution.
An honor society is an association of primarily
collegiate members and chapters whose purposes are to encourage and recognize superior
scholarship and/or leadership achievement either in broad fields of education or in
departmental fields at either undergraduate or graduate levels.
The honor society has followed the expansion and
specialization of higher education in America. When Phi Beta Kappa was organized in 1776
no thought was given to its proper field, since all colleges then in existence were for
the training of men for 'the service of the church and the state.' With the expansion of
education into new fields, a choice had to be made, and the society elected to operate in
the field of the liberal arts and sciences. Although this was not finally voted until
1898, the trend was evident years earlier, and 1885 saw the establishment of Tau Beta Pi.
Founder Edward H. Williams, Jr., was born at
Proctorsville, Vermont, on September 30, 1849; he died at Woodstock, Vermont, on November
2, 1933. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, he was head of the mining department of Lehigh
University when he determined to offer technical men as good a chance of recognition for
superior scholarship in their field as that afforded by the other society in the liberal
arts and sciences.
Working alone he conceived an organization, gave it a
name, designed its governmental structure, drew up its constitution, prepared its badge
and certificate, established its membership requirements, and planned all the necessary
details for its operation including the granting of chapters and the holding of
conventions.
Thus, with only a paper organization, he offered
membership to qualified graduates of Lehigh and received their acceptances and
enthusiastic endorsement. Late in the spring of 1885 he invited the valedictorian of the
senior class, Irving Andrew Heikes, to membership and he accepted, becoming the first
student member of Tau Beta Pi; but there was no time to initiate the rest of the eligible
men from the class of 1885.
Mr. Heikes returned for graduate work, however, and in
the fall of 1885, he, Dr. Williams, and two alumni who had earlier accepted membership,
initiated the eligible men from the class of 1886 and organized the chapter. The parent
chapter, Alpha of Pennsylvania, existed alone until 1892 when Alpha of Michigan was
founded at Michigan State University.
A detailed account of the founding and early history of
Tau Beta Pi was written by Edwin S. Stackhouse, Pennsylvania Alpha '86, after years of
painstaking research work (THE BENT, April 1941). Records of essential dates were lost,
but Mr. Stackhouse deduced that June 15, 1885, was the day on which the first
undergraduate student was initiated. Subsequent evidence, in the form of Mr. Heikes'
original invitation to membership, discovered in 1943, confirmed this date.
Since the founding of the Michigan Alpha
chapter, Tau Beta Pi has grown steadily; there are now collegiate chapters
at 235 institutions,
chartered alumnus chapters in 59 cities, and a total initiated membership
of 500,883.
The Association was incorporated under
the laws of Tennessee on December 1, 1947. The official name of the society
is The Tau Beta Pi
Association, Incorporated. It is a not-for-profit, educational organization
with no stock-issuing power. Its assets are held in its corporate name
or in trust. The
Association is classified under Section 501 (c)(3) (not private) of the United
States Internal Revenue Code, and gifts and bequests to it are tax deductible.
Tau Beta Pi is a founding member of the Association of
College Honor Societies, an association member of the American Society for Engineering
Education, an associate member of the American Association of Engineering Societies, and an
affiliate of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Junior
Engineering Technical Society.
The official badge of the Association is a watch
key in the form of the bent of a trestle, engraved on the reverse side
with the member's name, chapter, and class. The colors of the Association
are seal brown and white. The official quarterly magazine is THE BENT
of Tau Beta Pi. The name of the Association, its badge, and the title
of its magazine are registered in the United States Patent Office. The
creed of Tau Beta Pi, adopted in 1991, is Integrity and Excellence
in Engineering.
The word key describes the insignia of many
organizations. It comes from the fact that it was first designed, in the late eighteenth
century, to include a pocket watch winding feature, hence key. The bottom stem, added to
the basic insignia, had a tapered square hole fitting the common sizes of watch-winding
shaft. The top stem and ring were added so that the key could be worn as a pendant from a
chain, rather than as a pin or badge, thus easily used to wind watches. When the
'stem-winder' watch was introduced in the late nineteenth century, it replaced the
key-winder. But the insignia key remained, although with a vestigial hole now round for
manufacturing ease and economy.
The national headquarters of Tau Beta Pi are located on
the campus of The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, and have been there since
R. C. Matthews went to the University as a young instructor in 1907. R. C. Matthews served
as Tau Beta Pi's Secretary from 1905 to 1912 and as Secretary-Treasurer from 1912 until
his retirement in 1947. Before he assumed office in 1905 the headquarters offices had been
moved to wherever the offices of the Secretary were located. Professor Matthews' long
service to Tau Beta Pi and the University of Tennessee has made the university the
permanent headquarters of the Association. In 1963, the headquarters staff moved into a
suite of offices designed specifically for Tau Beta Pi in the then-new Nathan W. Dougherty
Engineering Building.
Merger with Sigma Tau
On January 1, 1974, the Sigma Tau Fraternity merged into
The Tau Beta Pi Association. The action was taken by the collegiate chapters of the two
organizations following lengthy study and recommendation by their Councils. Sigma Tau was
founded in 1904 at the University of Nebraska as an engineering honor society. At the time
of merger, it had 34 collegiate chapters and a total initiated membership of 45,000. The
basis of merger was the conviction that a single, strong honor society would better serve
the engineering profession.
The resulting organization is Tau Beta Pi, unchanged in
name, purpose, governance, operating procedures, and membership requirements (except for
the automatic Tau Beta Pi membership eligibility of all Sigma Tau members).
The 22 Sigma Tau chapters at institutions formerly
without Tau Beta Pi chapters began functioning under Tau Beta Pi rules on January 1, 1974,
and were converted to chapters of the Association in formal ceremonies on the dates shown
in the roster of chartered collegiate chapters following. The 12 Sigma Tau chapters
co-existing on campuses with Tau Beta Pi were merged into the Association, by initiation
of their active members in early 1974. The national headquarters office of Sigma Tau in
Lincoln, Nebraska, was closed on June 30, 1974, and its records were transferred to the
national headquarters of Tau Beta Pi in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Under terms of the merger plan, the financial assets of
the Sigma Tau fraternity were used in meeting the costs of converting and merging its
chapters, of giving its initiated active members all the insignia and materials regularly
going to new members of Tau Beta Pi, and of extending all paid Sigma Tau magazine (The
Pyramid) subscriptions to subscriptions to Tau Beta Pi's magazine (THE BENT). The Sigma
Tau Foundation, Inc., was dissolved and its assets were transferred directly to Tau Beta
Pi's Fellowship Fund. There, the invested sum will earn a return to assist in providing an
annual Tau Beta Pi-Sigma Tau fellowship under the Association's regular graduate-study
award program.
Under terms of the merger plan, all Sigma Tau alumni
whose addresses are known have been offered membership in Tau Beta Pi at the current
national initiation-fee charge. Those who choose not to join the Association will have all
Sigma Tau membership services (except for The Pyramid, which has been discontinued)
available to them through the Tau Beta Pi national headquarters.
The last national officers of the Sigma Tau Fraternity
were:
President G. W. Forman,
Vice President H. H. Bartel, Jr.,
Secretary-Treasurer J. P. Colbert, and
Councillors C. W. Leihy, R. P. Moser, R. E. Peterson, and J. W. Straight
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