Paul Harris Founder of
Rotary International
- Paul P. Harris (1868-1947), a lawyer, was the
founder of Rotary, the world's first service club.
Rotary is an organization of business and professional leaders united
worldwide who provide humanitarian service, promote high ethical standards
in all vocations, and help build good will and peace in the world.
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- Born in Racine, Wisconsin, U.S.A. on 19 April 1868, Paul was the
second of six children to George N. Harris and Cornelia Bryan Harris. At
age 3 he moved to Wallingford, Vermont where he grew up in the care of his
paternal grandparents. Married to Jean Thompson Harris (1881-1963), they
had no children. He received an LL.B. from the University of Iowa and
received an honorary LL.D. from the University of Vermont.
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- Paul Harris worked as a newspaper reporter, a business teacher, stock
company actor, cowboy, and traveled extensively in the U.S.A. and Europe
selling marble and granite. In 1896, he went to Chicago to practice law.
One evening Paul went with a professional friend to his suburban home.
After dinner, as they strolled through neighborhood, Paul's friend
introduced him to various tradesmen in their stores. This reminded Paul of
his New England village and it occurred to him "Why not have a fellowship
composed of businessmen from different occupations, without restrictions
of politics or religion?"
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- On 23 February, 1905, Paul Harris formed the first club with three
other businessmen: Silvester Schiele, a coal merchant; Gustavus Loehr, a
mining engineer; and Hiram Shorey, a merchant tailor. Paul Harris named
the new club "Rotary" because members met in rotation at their various
places of business. Club membership grew rapidly. Many members were from
small towns and in the Rotary club they found an opportunity for
camaraderie. When Paul Harris became president of the club in its third
year, he was convinced that the Rotary club could be developed into an
important service movement and strove to extend Rotary to other cities.
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- The second Rotary club was founded in San Francisco in 1908. In
August, 1910, when there were 16 clubs, the National Association of Rotary
Clubs was organized. When clubs were formed in Canada and Great Britain,
the name was changed to the International Association of Rotary Clubs in
1912, and was later shortened to Rotary International in 1922. Paul Harris
was the first president of both the National Association and the
International Association. As Rotary spanned the globe, branch offices
were in Europe and Asia. In 1932 the Four Way Test was created. Two world
wars changed the face of Rotary -Eastern Europe was closed to Rotary until
1989 when clubs were reestablished in Poland and Hungary. In 1990 the
first club was opened in the Soviet Union.
- When President emeritus Paul Harris passed away on 27 January 1947,
his dream had grown from an informal meeting of four to some 6,000 clubs
brought together through the service and fellowship of Rotary.
- Worldwide, Rotarians lend their time, expertise and resources to a
number of vocational programs, and community and international service
projects. The Rotary Foundation of Rotary International carries out some
US $60 million annually in international education and humanitarian
programs, providing grants which save lives and improve conditions
throughout the world; and sponsors international ambassadors of good will
through educational awards to university students and teachers, and
through international exchange of business and professional people. Today,
the Rotary Foundation scholarships program a the world's largest
privately-funded international scholarships program, approximately 1,000
scholarships are awarded annually. Through its PolioPlus Program,
Rotarians raised some US $230 million to purchase polio vaccine and to
support "social mobilization," the motivation of public and private
sectors and thousands of volunteers to perform immunization campaigns.
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- Paul was also prominent in other civic and professional work. He
served as the first chairman of the board of the National Easter Seal
Society of Crippled Children and Adults in the U.S.A. and of the
International Society for Crippled Children. He was a member of the board
of managers of the Chicago Bar Association and its representative at the
International Congress of Law at the Hague, and a committee member of the
American Bar Association. He received the Silver Buffalo Award from the
Boy Scouts of America for distinguished service to youth, and was
decorated by the governments of Brazil, Chile, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, France and Peru.
(This biography of Paul Harris is from the
Rotary
Clubs of Contra Costa County)
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