DUNELLEN-GREEN BROOK ROTARY CLUB
HISTORY OF ROTARY
                                  
The world's first service club was founded on 23 February 1905 when lawyer Paul Harris and three friends
met in a small office in downtown Chicago. These men wanted to rekindle in the turn-of-the-century city the
spirit of friendliness they had known in their home towns. Word of the club soon spread and others were
invited to join. They named their new club Rotary to describe the practice of meeting in rotation at the
members' various places of business.

Originally formed for fellowship, the first Rotary club quickly evolved to use the talents and resources of its
members to serve the community. By the end of 1905, the Rotary Club of Chicago had 30 members. Three
years later a second club was established in San Francisco, California, USA. The next year three more clubs
were established on the west coast of the United States and a fourth in New York City. Within a few years
other groups formed service clubs based on the Rotary model.

The first Rotary convention was held in the Congress Hotel in Chicago in August 1910. The National
Association of Rotary Clubs was organized at that time with 16 member clubs. Rotary founder Paul Harris
was elected the association's first president.

Rotary’s international growth:

During the 1911-1912 Rotary year, the association became international with the founding of a club in
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Soon, Rotary crossed the Atlantic to establish clubs in England, Ireland and
Northern Ireland. The National Association of Rotary Clubs, which became the International Association of
Rotary Clubs in 1912, adopted the name Rotary International (RI) in 1922.

Before reaching its 20th birthday, the Rotary association had grown to include some 200 clubs with more
than 20,000 members across the globe:

The first Rotary club in Latin America was organized in Havana, Cuba in 1915.
Asia's first club was established in Manila, Philippines in 1919.

In 1921, Rotary clubs were organized for the first time on continental Europe (Madrid, Spain), Africa
(Johannesburg, South Africa), and Australia (Melbourne).

Working for peace:

As Rotary grew, so did its scope of activities. During World War I, Rotary discovered new outlets for service
-- in war relief and peace fund drives at home and in emergency efforts abroad. In 1917, outgoing RI
President Arch Klumph proposed the establishment of an endowment fund, which in 1928 became The
Rotary Foundation. The Foundation awarded its first humanitarian grant (US$500) in 1930 to the
International Society for Crippled Children.  

After World War II, many clubs that had been disbanded during the conflict were re-established and
initiated new service projects, including relief efforts for refugees and prisoners of war.

In the aftermath of World War II, Rotary International sent the largest non-governmental organization
delegation to the United Nations Charter Conference, held in 1945 in San Francisco. Forty-nine Rotarians
served as delegates, advisors and consultants to the conference. A Rotary-sponsored conference of
education ministers and observers held in London in 1943 was the inspiration for the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), established in 1946.

The Rotary Foundation enjoyed modest growth until 1947, when Rotarians made a significant number of
contributions in memory of Paul Harris, who died in January 1947. That same year the Foundation launched
its first program, Graduate Fellowships (today called Ambassadorial Scholarships), sending 18 students
abroad to 7 countries. Today, approximately 1,300 students study abroad as Rotary Scholars every year.

Two of Rotary's programs for young people, Rotaract and Interact, were started during the turbulent
1960s.

Interact (for youth ages 14-18) and Rotaract (for young adults ages 18-30) clubs operate under the
guidance of a sponsoring Rotary club and give young people opportunities for community service and
leadership development, and to promote international peace and understanding. Service to youth remains
an important focus of Rotary.

Rotary today:

Rotary's most ambitious undertaking, announced in 1985, is the PolioPlus program -- a massive campaign
to eradicate polio by the year 2005. Conducted with the cooperation of national governments and
intergovernmental agencies such as the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Childrens
Fund (UNICEF), PolioPlus is a paradigm for public/private sector collaboration in the fight against disease.
PolioPlus helps support national and regional polio eradication programs by providing vaccine, surveillance
support and social mobilization. By the year 2005 -- the target date for certification of a polio-free world --
Rotarian contributions to the global polio eradication effort will reach a half billion US dollars.

First admitted in 1987, women are today the fastest-growing segment of Rotary membership, and
increasingly hold leadership positions within the organization. Nearly 2,000 women serve as club presidents
and women are also rapidly assuming regional leadership roles. Currently, some 1.2 million professional
men and women belong to more than 29,600 clubs worldwide.

Rotary continues to grow internationally. After the collapse of the Iron Curtain, Rotary clubs which had
been disbanded during World War II were re-established in central and eastern Europe. In 1990, Rotary
clubs were formed in Russia for the first time, and other former Soviet republics soon followed. Kyrgyzstan,
once a part of the Soviet Union, is a recent addition.

Today, Rotary International encourages its clubs to focus on a broad spectrum of service activities such as
hunger, the environment, violence prevention, illiteracy, drug abuse prevention, polio eradication, youth,
the elderly, and AIDS awareness and education. Rotary clubs around the world are united under the motto
Service Above Self.


This information is reprinted from a Rotary History brochure
(50hist.pdf) published by Rotary International.

For additional information and publications about Rotary International,
please visit their website by following the link below:

Rotary International


                         


                PAUL HARRIS





 Paul P. Harris was the founder of Rotary. He was born in Racine, Wisconsin on April 19, 1868, and spent
his early years in Wallingford, Vermont, prior to attending the University of Vermont, Princeton University
and the University of Iowa.  Following his graduation from the law school of the University of Iowa in 1891
he spent the next five years seeing the world and in coming to know his fellow man before settling down to
practice law in Chicago.
    
He worked as a newspaper reporter, a business college teacher, a stock company actor and as a cowboy.   
He traveled extensively as a salesman for a marble and granite concern in the U.S.A. and Europe.  These
varied experiences broadened his vision and were of material assistance in the early extension of Rotary.

In 1896, Paul Harris went to Chicago to practice law.   One day in 1900 he dined with a lawyer friend in
Rogers Park, a residential section of Chicago.   After dinner they took a walk and he was impressed by the
fact that his friend stopped at several stores and shops in the neighborhood and introduced him to the
proprietors, who were his friends.   Paul Harris' law clients were business friends, not social friends, but this
experience caused him to wonder why he couldn't make social friends out of at least some of his business
friends - and he resolved to organize a club which would band together a group of representative business
and professional men in friendship and fellowship.


[Source: Clinton Sunrise Rotary Club and Rotary District 6060]