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ROTARY GLOBAL HISTORY SECTION HOME First Clubs of Ireland & the UK (First 100 & RIBI History) HISTORY OUTLINE SEARCH
1911 BARC BURNS RI ARCHIVES CHARTERING FIRST CLUBS HISTORY
PRESIDENTS HUNTLEY PASCALL DISTRICTING WARREN YOUNGEST RIBI PRESIDENT RIBI
RIBI 100 SINGING MAGAZINE BRITISH STAGE STARS MORROW    
Section Chair - RGHF senior historian Basil Lewis, UK FIRST IN EACH REGION WHAT'S NEW? COMMITTEE UPDATES

THE INTERNATIONAL THEME
 

Every year since 1949, the President of RI has proposed an international theme. The first was a series of four "Objectives of Our Team" by Percy Hodgson, followed by four "goals" in 1950 and even three "targets" in 1956.

But have you ever wondered how Presidents arrive at their theme? In 1994 the President was Bill Huntley (from a club in my own district) and his chosen theme was 'Be A Friend'.

IN 1934, when Bill was a small boy at grade school in the City of Hull, his father was taken dangerously ill while working on a trawler in the seas to the North of Scotland. Mrs. Huntley was advised that she should travel North to meet the ship when it docked. So she took Bill and his brother for what in those days was a horrendous and long journey by slow steam trains to the far North of Scotland. The little party arrived at the town of Thurso and had just enough time to see Bill's father a short while before he died of a brain hemorrhage in Dujnar Hospital. The young mother and the two small boys were now alone in a strange town several hundred miles from their home, knowing nobody and with no place to stay while formalities were completed. At this point of time, the owner of the Thurso foundry who was also a trawler agent, Mr Jack Hutchinson and his wife, came to their aid, arranging lodgings and for the transportation of the coffin back to Hull.

In fact 'befriending' them. This was something that Bill never forgot.

When the time came for them to return to Hull, Bill remembers his school teacher telling him that he "was now the man in the family" but he also remembered the kindness of the Hutchinsons in Scotland. 'Befriending' meant something practical and positive to Bill, and thus it became a most appropriate theme for him to adopt when he became President of Rotary.

This, however, is not the end of the story because at an Asian zone meeting in Seoul in 1993, Bill explained his theme and recounted this story. One of the District Governors present was so impressed that he immediately offered to present a Paul Harris Fellowship to the trawler agent and the appropriate papers went off to the Thurso Rotary Club. Unfortunately, the present membership knew nothing about the award of the Paul Harris Fellowship or of any Mr. Jack Hutchins, the name on the PHF documents, and didn't know what it was about, until a chance telephone call from the District PRO in Bill's home area alerted them. It was by then over 50 years after the event, but the club did some research and discovered that the 'Befriender' at the time was a Mr. Hutchinson not Hutchins, and that though Jack had died some years earlier, his widow was still alive, a frail and elderly lady. It was arranged that at a club meeting in September 1994, the Paul Harris Fellowship would be presented to Mrs. Hutchinson in honour of how she and her husband had been 'a friend' to the Huntleys in their hour of need. In the event, it was the Hutchinsons daughter, Ruby, who received the Fellowship award. She said at the time:"Jack was always like that. He was a friend to everybody."

Even then, there was to be one more twist in the story. During September 1994, a party of Rotarians and their wives from Bill's home district , 1270, went on a Friendship Exchange visit to District 6440, 'the Home District' of Evanston. As the Thurso Club was settling down to their evening meeting in Scotland, the party from 1270 was lunching with Bill Huntley in Rotary Center in America. At the time of the Thurso Club's meeting, Bill was told that in Thurso, the Paul Harris Fellowship was to be presented to the Hutchinson family. All of us then raised our glasses to the good folk of Thurso whose actions had been the inspiration for the international theme of the year 'Be A Friend'.

With thanks to Trevor Williams of the Thurso Club for corrections and additions to our original story.

Rotary Global History Fellowship Senior historian Basil Lewis

Also see the president's home page
 

 
 

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RGHF Mission: As an effort to serve others, RGHF accumulates and preserves the complete history, values and philosophy of the Rotary movement, as well as encourages others to do the same at every level of the Rotary movement, and publishes those histories, values and philosophies on the internet, as well as other forms of media as expedient. 17 March 2003, amended 20 December 2007, Rotary Global History Fellowship Board of Directors.

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