The Early Years of Rotary

The first Club, in Chicago, with its initial four
members, soon added Harry Ruggles and Bill Jensen to their number. Gus Loehr and
Hiram Shorey did not stay as members for very long but new members were enlisted
and, within just a few months, the Club membership grew rapidly.
By 1907 membership of the Club had risen to 87. In the following year, the
second Club was formed in San Francisco, through a personal friend of Paul
Harris. The San Franciscan Rotarians then formed a third Club in Oakland, a
fourth in Seattle and a fifth in Los Angeles. New York and Boston soon followed.
In 1909 the Chicago Club had 300 members.
At the start of 1910 there were 16 Clubs, all in the USA, with a total
membership of 1 800.
The First Convention – Association – and President.
In 1910 Paul Harris and Chesley Perry (also of the Chicago Club) wished to
extend the Rotary Movement and so set up the first Convention, in Chicago, in
August 1910. At the Convention, attended by 1 500 of the 1 800 members, it was
decided to set up a national Association. Paul Harris was elected President and
Chesley Perry as Secretary. A Board of Directors was set up and a Treasurer and
Vice-President elected.
Key Dates and Facts 1905 – 1910
Number of Clubs:
1905: 1
1910: 16
Membership:
1905: 80
1910: 1 800
Annual Conventions:
1910: Chicago
RI Presidents:
1910 – 1911: Paul Harris
Key events:
1905: Rotary founded in Chicago, Club number 1.
1906: Wagon wheel emblem adopted.
1908: Second Rotary Club formed in San Francisco.
1910: First Annual Convention in Chicago.
1910: National Association of Rotary Clubs formed in the USA
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