(Provided by
Bill Lauer)
George Lennon & John B.
Anderson -- Joliet Rotary Club's
Founding Fathers
What was to become in 1913
the Rotary Club of Joliet,
began in 1910 as the Study
Club, whose purpose was to
study business building,
efficiency, and character
development.
Serving as its president was
John McGuire, with the
following as members:
John P. Kelly, Edmund H.
Lennon, Thomas P. Lennon,
Maurice F. Lennon,
Joseph McGlynn,
Michael J. Ryan, Thomas S.
Stoll, Robert P. Kiep,
Ambrose Kiep, George Lennon,
A.F. Bannon, James F.
Hebert, James Ley, Nick J.
Freis and F.
B. Murphy.
In 1910, George Lennon
attended the first
convocation of a proposed
school of business organized
by Arthur Frederick Sheldon
of Chicago. It was held as
a summer session on a North
Shore location, which
subsequently became the
campus of Mundelein
College. George was so
impressed by the course that
he arranged to have a
speaker come to Joliet to
give the course to the
16-member Study Club on a
biweekly basis.
Upon completion of this
course by Study Club
members, it was suggested by
Maurice Lennon
that for the mutual benefit
of the group, biweekly
meetings be held to follow
up the fellowship
established and to review
the lessons of the course.
Harry N. Tolles
was sent by the school to
act as organizer and
instructor. Arrangements
were made by the group to
have dinner meetings at the
Commercial Club and that
each member take his turn at
being chairman of the
meeting, thereby rotating
the chairmanship. From this
procedure, it was suggested
that the group be called
Rotary Club, not knowing, at
the time, about Rotary
International.
"From time to time, new
members were added to this
group, among whom were
Ralph Austin,
Eddy Curry,
Forbes Fairburn,
William E. Fay,
Frank Fitzgerald,
Ki Fredericks,
John Kelly,
Arthur Lennon,
Peter Lennon,
Dwight McNally,
Joe Mitchell,
Gerald Murray,
Ray Schroeder,
Harvey Weeks,
and John B. Anderson,
who became a member in May
1913," said George Lennon.
The 25 members of the then
Joliet Rotary Club,
according to the list
prepared by John B.
Anderson, were: John
B. Anderson, Ralph Austin,
A.M. Bannon, James Bannon,
Vaughn Brooks, Forbes W.
Fairburn, Frank Fitzgerald,
Leonard Fredericks, Otis
Haven, James Hebert, Glen
Hildebrand, Jerry Kinsella,
Arthur Lennon, Ed Lennon,
George Lennon, Maurice
Lennon, Thomas Lennon, E. B.
Lord, Dr. H. F. Lotz, Joseph
McGlynn, John McGuire, J. D.
Price, B. K. Tarkington,
Charles Underwood,
and Harvey Weeks.
With Harvey Weeks as
president, the group
embarked upon an ambitious
venture. In the Adam-Arcade
Building (later destroyed by
fire and now the site of the
Chicago Title and Trust
Company at Ottawa and Van
Buren streets), which was
just completed and still
without tenants, they staged
the Joliet Business Show and
Efficiency Congress, June
11-14, 1913, with
exhibitions of modern
business and office
equipment. The
manufacturers were permitted
to exhibit without fee.
Local schools added interest
with educational exhibits.
Mayor Harvey E. Wood
made the opening address and
the public attended by the
thousands. It was an
unqualified success.
Up to this time, Rotary
International had maintained
its policy of opposition to
affiliation of clubs in
cities with less than 75,000
population. Harvey
Weeks had approached
the organization earlier and
had met with firm rebuff,
inasmuch as Rotary
International believed
Rotary would not be workable
in a town the size of
Joliet.
Attracted by the widespread
favorable publicity the show
was receiving, a Chicago
Rotary delegation, headed by
Chesley R. Perry, Secretary,
came to give the show and
the group a critical
examination. So impressed
was the delegation that it
requested a meeting with a
committee to discuss the
ways and means to receive
the Joliet group into Rotary
International membership.
The meeting was held on June
14 at the Hobbs Hotel.
In commenting upon the show,
Harvey Weeks
said, "It was evident to the
committee that we had
practiced Rotary and what it
preached as to 'Service
Above Self'. Everything in
that show was absolutely
free. We had spent much
time in Chicago getting
exhibits, and manufacturers
could hardly believe it
would be free advertising
for them, whereas all other
large cities charged fees to
finance the undertaking. We
got the building free, for
it was great advertising for
the Adam Arcade. The total
amount spent was about $150
for everything, which the
members paid by voluntary
contributions."
In the minutes of the June
24, 1913 meeting, a motion
was made by Mr. Brooks that
the Joliet Rotary Club apply
for membership in the
International Association of
Rotary Clubs. Seconded by
Mr. Al Bannon. The motion
carried unanimously.
Joliet Rotary was accepted
into membership at the
Rotary International
Convention held in Buffalo,
August 18-21, 1913.
July 8, 1913, was considered
the last regular meeting of
the Study Club, and all
members and their lady
friends were invited to
attend.
It should be remembered that
we were officially chartered
August 1, 1913, then
officially certified at the
International Convention.
We became the first
Rotary Club from a city of
less than 75,000 people,
therefore we are Number ONE
in many respects.
The September 4, 1913
minutes show that the
following men were elected:
President--Mr. Brooks,
Vice President--John
Anderson,
Treasurer--Ed Lennon,
Secretary--James
Bannon, and
Sgt.-at-Arms--Frank
Fitzgerald. For the
first Board of Directors:
Mr. Lord, one
year, Mr. Weeks,
two years, and Maurice
Lennon, three years.
Mr. Lord moved that we adopt
a membership fee of $10.00
and annual dues of $2.00.
He also moved that the
constitution formerly
adopted be abrogated and
that we adopt the model
constitution of the
International Association.
The motion carried. Later
at the September 11, 1913
meeting, they adopted a
membership fee of $5.00 and
annual dues of $5.00.
Noon luncheons were started
in place of dinner meetings
on September 22, 1914, in
the Hobbs Cafe. Since then,
Joliet Rotary has held its
luncheon meetings in the
Universalist Church parlors,
Snapps Cafeteria, Chamber of
Commerce, Masonic Temple,
YMCA, Woodruff Hotel, Louis
Joliet Hotel, and Louis
Joliet Renaissance Center.
Since 1913, the Joliet
Rotary Club, by
recommendations to Rotary
International, has ceded
territory as well as helped
establish new territories by
starting Rotary Clubs in
Ottawa (1914), Morris
(1915), Kankakee (1915),
Streator (1919), LaSalle
(1920), DeKalb (1921),
Aurora (1923), Manteno
(1937) Wilmington (1938) and
Lockport (1966). The Club
has produced four District
Governors: J. Stanley
Brown 1918-19,
Rev. Henry E. Rompel
1923-24, Ralph E.
Morgan 1957-58, and
Robert E. Leckrone
1986-87.
In 1987, Rotary
International extended
membership to women in the
United States. The first
women inducted into Joliet
Rotary were: Mary
Jane Broncato, Ruth Calvert
Fitzgerald, Carolyn Healy
and Sister Dismas
Janssen.
At the Conference on
Legislation held in
Singapore, January 23, 1989,
resolution 8954 was
presented by Joliet Rotarian
Bob Leckrone,
and four or five other
Rotarians, thus officially
admitting women into Rotary.
Joliet Rotary Club Projects
-
$631,011 Total Funds Awarded!
The tradition of Joliet
Rotary has been to start a
needed community project or
assist a program that needs
help. Once these community
projects are working well,
Rotary then moves on to
something else. This policy
is why Joliet Rotary is a
well-kept secret in the
community. Our Club has
been instrumental in
implementing many community
services and projects, but
the Rotary name is
associated with very few of
them.
Joliet Rotarians as
individuals have always been
the leaders in our
community. Many Rotarians
have been past presidents,
board members and leaders of
the Chamber of Commerce,
United Way, Will County
Center for Economic
Development, and numerous
other civic organizations.
This is primarily due to the
procedure of selecting
members according to the
classification system.
Through the years, Rotary
has either sponsored or
taken an active part in many
local projects. Joliet
Rotary purchased uniforms
and instruments for the
start of the Joliet Township
High School band. It also
sponsored projects for
Crippled Children's Home,
now Trinity School. This
program was sponsored by
Rotary up to the time the
state provided funding.
Rotary also sponsored the
first community July Fourth
fireworks display.
Important Dates in Joliet Rotary
History
In 1913, three Rotarians,
Al Oldhaver, Herb
Spencer, and
Art Montzheimer,
served on the board of
Joliet Township High
School. Joliet Rotary
purchased the instruments
and uniforms for the start
of the high school marching
band from Rotarian
George Wiswell's
Music Store. The High
School Band went on to
become State Champions in
1924, 1925, and 1926. They
won National Championships
in 1926, 1927, and 1928, and
then received permanent
possession of the cup. In
1929, they were a guest band
at Denver, because they
could not participate after
three successive victories.
In 1930, they lost by one
point to Senn High from
Flint, Michigan. They won
again in 1931, 1933, 1935,
1938, and 1940, then won all
regional contests up to 1964
when the high school split
into three schools.
1914 - Vaughn Brooks, the
second president of Joliet
Rotary, was responsible for
founding the Joliet Chamber
of Commerce. Rotarian
Art Leach was the
first Chamber President.
1915 - Rotary wanted to turn
a quarry on Rowell Avenue
into a safe place to swim.
Art Montzheimer,
Chief Engineer of the E.J. &
E., chaired the Michigan
Beach Committee. A land
lease was secured and a
minstrel show was put on for
three nights at the high
school to raise money to
construct a beach and build
a bath house. As a result,
thirty carloads of Lake
Michigan sand were added to
the quarry to make the
beach.
1915 - Procured Higginbotham
Woods for city park
property.
1917 - During World War I,
Rotary equipped the "Dandy
First" soldiers with shoes
and other equipment while
they were training at
Dellwood Park.
1919 - Arranged for use of
the country club during the
flu epidemic.
1920 - The high school band
was the official Rotary 12th
District Band at the
International Convention at
Atlantic City. Joliet
Rotary paid for the trip.
1923 - Women of Rotary
formed.
1924 - The high school band
was the official District
Band at the District
Convention in St. Louis.
The American Legion Band
later evolved from this.
1930 - Rotary sponsored the
first Boy Scout camp at
Morris which is still in
existence. Later they
sponsored the first Girl
Scout camp at Custer Park.
1934 - Hosted 474 delegates
at the Rotary 40th District
Conference.
1935 - Crippled Children
Clinic was spearheaded by
Dr. John Mitchell
and other Rotarians in
the medical field. Funds
came from the proceeds of
double-header high school
basketball games sponsored
annually for several years
in the JTHS gym. Teams
involved included Joliet
Township, Joliet Catholic
High, Lockport, and another
school. At first, Joliet
Catholic did not play JTHS,
as there was concern over
the intensity of the
rivalry. The first game
between the rival schools,
which is believed to have
taken place in 1938, was
under the sponsorship of
Joliet Rotary.
1938 - Contributed a station
wagon to the Crippled
Children Clinic.
1942 - During WWII,
John Lux, John MacKeever,
and Fred Woodruff
originated and directed a
hospitality program for
traveling servicemen. This
program later gained
national recognition for
Joliet Rotary.
1947 - Sponsored basketball
clinics with the Park
District on Saturday
mornings in five school gyms
for 700 grade school boys.
A total of 272 games were
played.
In recent history, Joliet
Rotary has contributed to
the Rotary 3H Program and
oversubscribed to the
Polio-Plus Program. It also
has hosted many students in
both the regular exchange
program and the short-term
student exchange program,
and participated in the
Rotary Group Exchange with
groups from England,
Egypt/Bhrain, Greece,
Argentina, Australia, India
and Turkey.
For many years, the Joliet
Rotary has donated
approximately $4,500
annually to various local
charities.
1980 - The club participated
in the 75th International
Convention in Chicago and
also hosted 150 foreign
visitors in Joliet during
Hospitality Night.
Annual Rotary Raffle Started
1984-1988 - Over $250,000
and in-kind contributions
were donated to build the
Rotary Sports Complex at the
Galowich YMCA on the west
side of Joliet.
1989 - Established a $75,000
endowment fund to maintain
the YMCA Sports Field.
1990 - $30,000 to Habitat
for Humanity to construct
two homes.
1991 - $30,000 to
Will-Grundy Free Medical
Clinic for an endowment fund
for medications.
1992 - $26,100 to D-FY-IT
drug testing program for
local high schools.
1993 - $30,000 to purchase
equipment to establish a
handicapped playground for
Easter Seals.
Located and donated 18
hospital beds which were
shipped to a clinic in
Mexico.
1994 - Purchased a 15
passenger van for the
Salvation Army.
1995 - Donated $30,000 to
help refurbish facilities
for an abused women's
shelter.
1996 - Donated $32,000 to
Easter Seals for furnishing
a supervisory group home.
1997 - Donated $30,000 to
United Cerebral Palsy Park
for specialized playground
equipment.
1998 - Donated a total of
$30,000 for endowed
scholarships to be awarded
annually by Joliet Junior
College, Lewis University,
and the University of St.
Francis.
1999 - Donated $30,000 for
funding of the Will-Grundy
Rotary Dental Clinic.
2000 - Donated $27,400 to
Morningstar Mission
Ministries for their kitchen
renovation project.
2001 - Divided a $30,000
donation to the Salvation
Army for renovation of their
kitchen, and to the Will
County Humane Society for
renovation of their
facility.
2002 - Donated a total of
$30,000 to the Rotary
College Scholarship Program
for the scholarship fund
established at Lewis
University, University of
St. Francis, and Joliet
Junior College.
2003 - Donated $30,000 to
Joliet Hospice for the
construction of a patient
room.
2004 - Donated $14,000 to
Lamb's Fold toward a new
shower room for the women
and children.