The
Founder of Rotary
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Paul Harris, the founder of Rotary, was born
in Racine, Wisconsin, USA, on April 19, 1868, but moved at the age of 3 to
Wallingford, Vermont, to be raised by his grandparents. In the forward to
his autobiography My Road to Rotary, he credits the friendliness and
tolerance he found in Vermont as his inspiration for the creation of Rotary.
Trained as a lawyer, Paul gave himself five
years after his graduation from law school in 1891 to see as much of the
world as possible before settling down and hanging out his shingle. During
that time, he traveled widely, supporting himself with a great variety of
jobs. He worked as a reporter in San Francisco, a teacher at a business
college in Los Angeles, a cowboy in Colorado, a desk clerk in Jacksonville,
Florida, a tender of cattle on a freighter to England, and as a traveling
salesman for a granite company, covering both the U.S. and Europe.
Remaining true to his five-year plan, he
settled in Chicago in 1896, and it was there on the evening of February 23,
1905, that he met with three friends to discuss his idea for a businessmen's
club. This is commonly regarded as the first Rotary club meeting. Over the
next five years, the movement spread as Rotary clubs were formed in other
U.S. cities. When the National Association of Rotary Clubs held its first
convention in 1910, Paul was elected president.
After his term, and as the organization's only
president-emeritus, Paul continued to travel extensively, promoting the
spread of Rotary both in the USA and abroad. A prolific writer, Paul wrote
several books about the early days of the organization and the role he was
privileged to play in it. These include The Founder of Rotary, This Rotarian
Age and the autobiographical My Road to Rotary. He also wrote several
volumes of Perigrinations detailing his many travels. He died in Chicago on
January 27, 1947.
Room 711
Room 711 of the Unity Building at 127 North
Dearborn Street in downtown Chicago, Illinois, was the site of Rotary's
first meeting on February 23, 1905. At that time, it was the office of
Gustavus Loehr, a mining engineer and one of the founding members of the
organization.
Around 1980, the Rotary Club of Chicago, the
club that originated from that gathering, set about to preserve the site. It
rented the room and undertook an extensive effort to recreate the office as
it existed in 1905. For several years, the club maintained the room as a
shrine for visiting Rotarians. That responsibility was eventually assumed by
the Paul Harris 711 Club, a nonprofit organization comprising Rotarians from
around the world. In 1989, when the Unity Building was scheduled to be
demolished, the 711 Club carefully dismantled the office, salvaging the
original interior from doors to radiators. Everything was placed in storage
until a permanent place to reconstruct the room could be found. In 1993, the
Board of Directors of Rotary International set aside space for it on the
16th floor of the RI World Headquarters in Evanston, Illinois.
First Rotary Club
On the evening of February 23, 1905, Paul
Harris and three friends, Sylvester Schiele, Gustavus Loehr, and Hiram
Shorey, met in Loehr's business office in Room 711 of the Unity Building in
downtown Chicago to discuss Paul's idea that businessmen should get together
periodically for camaraderie and to enlarge their circle of business and
professional acquaintances.
From their discussion came the idea for a men's
club which would meet weekly and whose membership would be limited to one
representative from each business and profession. After enlisting a fifth
member, Harry Ruggles, the group was formally organized as the Rotary Club
of Chicago. By the end of 1905, the club's roster showed a membership of 30
with Sylvester Schiele as president and Ruggles as treasurer. Paul Harris
declined office in the new club and didn't become its president until two
years later.
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