History of The Rotary Foundation
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Arch C.
Klumph,
1916-17 president of Rotary
International and founder of
The Rotary Foundation |
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In 1917, Arch C. Klumph, Rotary's sixth president,
proposed to the Rotary International Convention in
Atlanta, Georgia, USA, the creation of an "endowment
fund for Rotary . . . for the purpose of doing good in
the world in charitable, educational, and other avenues
of community service." A few months later, the endowment
received its first contribution of $26.50 from the
Rotary Club of Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
In 1928, when the endowment fund had grown to more
than US$5,000, the fund was renamed The Rotary
Foundation, and it became a distinct entity within
Rotary International. Five Trustees, including Klumph,
were appointed to "hold, invest, manage, and administer
all of its property. . . as a single trust, for the
furtherance of the purposes of RI."
Two years later, the Foundation made its first grant
of US$500 to the International Society for Crippled
Children. The ISCC — created by Rotarian Edgar F.
"Daddy" Allen — later grew into the Easter Seals
organization.
The Great Depression and World War II both impeded
significant growth for the Foundation, but the need for
promoting a lasting world peace generated great post-war
interest in developing the Foundation. After Rotary
founder Paul P. Harris died in 1947, contributions began
pouring into Rotary International, and the Paul Harris
Memorial Fund was created for the purpose of building
the Foundation.
That same year, the first Foundation
program — the forerunner of the Rotary Ambassadorial
Scholarships program — was established. Then in 1965-66,
three new programs were launched — Group Study Exchange,
Awards for Technical Training, and Grants for Activities
in Keeping with the Objective of The Rotary Foundation,
which was later called Matching Grants.
The Health, Hunger and Humanity (3-H) program was
launched in 1978, with the Rotary Volunteers program
being created as a part of 3-H in 1980. The
PolioPlus program was announced in 1984-85, and the
following year saw the introduction of Rotary Grants for
University Teachers. The first Peace Forums were held in
1987-88, leading to the establishment of Rotary Peace
Programs. Then in 1989, 1963-64 RI President Carl P.
Miller and his wife, Ruth, donated US$1 million to
establish the Discovery Grants program.
Throughout this time, support of the Foundation grew
tremendously. Since that first $26.50 donation in 1917,
the Foundation has received contributions totaling more
than US$1 billion. More than US$70 million was
contributed in 2003-04 alone. To date, some 914,792
individuals have been recognized as Paul Harris Fellows
— that is, someone who has contributed US$1000 or has
had that amount contributed in his or her name.
Such strong support and involvement of Rotarians
worldwide ensures a secure future for The Rotary
Foundation as it continues its vital work for
international understanding and world peace. |