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Paul Harris, a lawyer, gathered together three friends to meet on
February 23, 1905. The three were Silvester Schlele, a coal dealer;
Hiram Shorey, a merchant tailor; and Gustavus Loehr, a mining engineer.
They met in Loehr's business office in Room 711 of the Unity Building
at 127 North Dearborn in downtown Chicago. The purpose was to discuss
Harris' idea that business leaders should meet periodically to enjoy
camaraderie and to enlarge their circle of business and professional
acquaintances. They decided to meet weekly and to rotate the meetings
at each others' offices (hence the name Rotary). To promote diversity
they decided to limit members to one representative from each business
and profession.
After enlisting a fifth member, printer Harry Ruggles, the group
formally organized as the Rotary Club of Chicago. They adopted as the
original club emblem a wagon wheel design that became the familiar
cogwheel emblem now the official seal of Rotary.
As membership grew, the club abandoned the idea of meeting in
members'
offices and began to meet in local hotels and restaurants, a practice
that continues today. By the end of 1905 the club had 30 members with
Schlele as president and Ruggles as treasurer. Paul Harris became
president of the Chicago club in 1907.
The Rotary commitment to service began in 1907 when the club donated a
horse to a local minister to enable him to make the rounds of his
parishioners. A few weeks later the club finished its first service
project - constructing Chicago's first public lavatory, located at City
Hall.
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To give voice to the club's service orientation, speakers at the
national convention in 1911 used the phrases "service, not self" and
"he profits most who serves best." These phrases later became "Service
Above Self" which is Rotary's primary motto.
From this modest beginning, the Rotary idea spread beyond Chicago. In
1908 the second Rotary club was formed inSan Francisco, followed by
clubs in Oakland, Seattle (Seattle Rotary Club #4 now bills itself as
the world's largest Rotary club), Los Angeles and New York. In 1910 the
first Canadian club was formed in Winnipeg, Manitoba. In that same year
the National Association of Rotary Clubs held its first convention and
Harris was elected president. Rotary expanded internationally beyond
North America establishing clubs in 1912 in the British Isles. By 1921
Rotary was represented on six continents. To reflect this world wide
presence the name Rotary International was adopted one year later. By
1925 Rotary had grown to 200 clubs with more than 20,000 members.
Eighty-two years later, Rotary now has 1.2 million members in more than
31,000 clubs in over 165 countries.
To commemorate Rotary's founding, members of the Chicago club preserved
the interior of Room 711 when the UnityBuilding was demolished and
later recreated it at the RI headquarters in Evanston, Illinois where
it can be viewed and used an aid to recalling the beginnings of Rotary.
From one room to an international presence in a hundred years -- truly
a remarkable achievement of one man with a vision and three friends.
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