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The first four Rotarians:
Gustavus Loehr, Silvester Schiele,
Hiram Shorey, and Paul P. Harris
(from left) Courtesy of Rotary Images
The world's first service club, the Rotary
Club of Chicago, was formed on 23 February 1905 by Paul P. Harris, an
attorney who wished to capture in a professional club the same friendly
spirit he had felt in the small towns of his youth. The Rotary name derived
from the early practice of rotating meetings among members' offices.
Rotary's popularity spread, and within a decade, clubs were chartered from
San Francisco to New York to Winnipeg, Canada. By 1921, Rotary clubs had
been formed on six continents. The organization adopted the Rotary
International name a year later.
As Rotary grew, its mission expanded beyond serving club members’
professional and social interests. Rotarians began pooling their resources
and contributing their talents to help serve communities in need. The
organization's dedication to this ideal is best expressed in its motto:
Service Above Self.
By 1925, Rotary had grown to 200 clubs with more than 20,000 members. The
organization's distinguished reputation attracted presidents, prime
ministers, and a host of other luminaries to its ranks — among them author
Thomas Mann, diplomat Carlos P. Romulo, humanitarian Albert Schweitzer, and
composer Jean Sibelius.
The Four-Way Test
In 1932, Rotarian Herbert J. Taylor created The Four-Way Test, a code of
ethics adopted by Rotary 11 years later. The test, which has been translated
into more than 100 languages, asks the following questions:
Of the things we think, say or do
Is it the TRUTH?
Is it FAIR to all concerned?
Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?
Rotary and World War II
During and after World War II, Rotarians became increasingly involved in
promoting international understanding. In 1945, 49 Rotary members served in 29
delegations to the United Nations Charter Conference. Rotary still actively
participates in UN conferences by sending observers to major meetings and
promoting the United Nations in Rotary publications.
Rotary International's
relationship with the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) dates back to a 1943 London Rotary conference that
promoted international cultural and educational exchanges.
In 1945, 49 Rotary club members served in
29 delegations to the UN Charter Conference. Rotary still actively
participates in UN conferences by sending observers to major meetings and
covering the United Nations in its publications. Attended by ministers
of education and observers from around the world, and chaired by a past
president of RI, the conference was an impetus to the establishment of UNESCO in
1946.
"Few there are who do not recognize the
good work which is done by Rotary clubs throughout the free world," former
Prime Minister Winston Churchill of Great Britain once declared.
An endowment fund, set up by Rotarians in 1917 "for doing good in the world,"
became a not-for-profit corporation known as The Rotary Foundation in 1928. Upon
the death of Paul Harris in 1947, an outpouring of Rotarian donations made in
his honor, totaling US$2 million, launched the Foundation's first program —
graduate fellowships, now called Ambassadorial Scholarships. Today,
contributions to The Rotary Foundation total more than US$80 million annually
and support a wide range of humanitarian grants and educational programs that
enable Rotarians to bring hope and promote international understanding
throughout the world.
Dawn of a new century
In 1985, Rotary made a historic commitment to immunize all of the world's
children against polio. Working in partnership with nongovernmental
organizations and national governments thorough its PolioPlus program, Rotary is
the largest private-sector contributor to the global polio eradication campaign.
Rotarians have mobilized hundreds of thousands of PolioPlus volunteers and have
immunized more than one billion children worldwide. By the 2005 target date for
certification of a polio-free world, Rotary will have contributed half a billion
dollars to the cause.
As it approached the 21st century, Rotary
worked to meet society’s changing needs, expanding its service efforts to
address such pressing issues as environmental degradation, illiteracy, world
hunger, and children at risk.
In 1989, the organization voted to admit women into clubs worldwide and now
claims more than 145,000 female members in its ranks.
After the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the dissolution of the Soviet
Union, Rotary clubs were formed or re-established throughout Central and
Eastern Europe. The first Russian Rotary club was chartered in 1990, and the
organization underwent a growth spurt for the next several years.
More than a century after Paul Harris and his colleagues chartered the club
that eventually led to Rotary International, Rotarians continue to take
pride in their history. In honor of that first club, Rotarians have
preserved its original meeting place, Room 711 in Chicago’s Unity Building,
by re-creating the office as it existed in 1905. For several years, the Paul
Harris 711 Club maintained the room as a shrine for visiting Rotarians. In
1989, when the building was scheduled to be demolished, the club carefully
dismantled the office and salvaged the interior, including doors and
radiators. In 1993, the RI Board of Directors set aside a permanent home for
the restored Room 711 on the 16th floor of RI World Headquarters in nearby
Evanston.
Today, 1.2 million Rotarians belong to over 32,000 Rotary clubs in more than
200 countries and geographical areas. |
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