History

Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity was inspired by Richard J. H. Gottheil, a professor of languages at
Columbia University and a leader in the early American Zionist movement. On December 29, 1898,
Professor Gottheil gathered together a group of Jewish students from several New York City
universities to form a Zionist youth society. The society was called Z.B.T.
During this brief period, the society came to serve as a kind of fraternal body for college
students who, as Jews, were excluded from joining existing fraternities because of the sectarian
practices which prevailed at the end of the nineteenth century in the United States. The
continuing need for a Greek-letter fraternity open to Jewish students prompted Z.B.T. to
change its raison d'etre, structure and emphasis and to become Zeta Beta Tau in 1903.
Zeta Beta Tau expanded rapidly. By 1909, it had established 13 Chapters throughout the Northeast
and a 14th at Tulane University at New Orleans, thereby taking on a truly national dimension.
In 1913, it established its first Canadian Chapter at McGill University in Montreal. Five years
later, it founded its first West Coast Chapter at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.
At the 1954 National Convention, the delegates amended Zeta Beta Tau's Constitution, ritual and internal
procedures both in theory and in practice to eliminate sectarianism as a qualification for membership.
Spearheaded by the growth of state and municipal university systems, hundreds of new institutions
were opened in the quarter-century following World War II. By the 1960's virtually every American
had an opportunity to attend college. From 1945 to 1969, the number of ZBT chapters increased from 30 to 80 units.
The history of mergers in the Zeta Beta Tau Brotherhood followed a pattern of linking common
traditions. In 1959, Phi Alpha merged into Phi Sigma Delta, and in 1961 Kappa Nu merged into Phi
Epsilon Pi. In 1969-70, Phi Sigma Delta and Phi Epsilon Pi merged into Zeta Beta Tau.
Traumatic experiences were generated by the polarization over the Vietnam conflict. The American
fraternity system - including Zeta Beta Tau, was subsequently affected by the great wave of anti-establishment
feeling that was pervasive throughout the country. Many of the Chapters which survived this period
of turmoil did so in a weakened condition. During the late 1970's and the early 1980's, there was a
renewed interest in fraternity life, resulting in increased initiation statistics, revival of many
dormant Chapters and expansion to new campuses.
During the 1980's, every Greek-letter group continued their efforts to stop hazing. Despite ZBT's
best efforts, hazing continued and increased in frequency and severity. ZBT concluded that all
efforts to reform the institution of pledging had failed; pledging was the problem. This was because
pledges were considered second-class citizens, with no rights and no chance to refuse even the most
outrageous demands of a Brother, unless he quit the Fraternity. In 1989, in a last-ditch effort to
eliminate hazing, ZBT eliminated pledging and all second-class status from the Fraternity. In its
place, ZBT established a Brotherhood Program, with minimum standards (Brotherhood Quality Standards),
as well as programs of education, bonding, and earning one's Brotherhood status that applied to all Brothers of ZBT.
Today, the merged Zeta Beta Tau Brotherhood is some 110,000 Brothers strong, and ZBT Chapters and
Colonies are established at over 80 campus locations. Through good times and bad, ZBT has been in
the forefront in pioneering new concepts - as evidenced by its very founding, its elimination of
sectarian membership practices, its acceptance of mergers, its elimination of pledging, and its
ability to solve enormous problems when others abandoned the effort. ZBT continues to maintain
a tradition of leadership and respect in the interfraternity world.