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Brief histories of the first clubs of each geographic region

Rotary Club of Nairobi, the First Club of East Africa (Kenya, Uganda and Tanganyika)

Rotary International District 9200

History of Rotary in Africa

EAST AFRICAN ROTARY

(Also see 75 years in Nairobi, "Touching a Nation")

The first club in East Africa, the countries formerly known as Kenya, Uganda and Tanganyika, was the Rotary Club of Nairobi, founded in 1930. It was then a further 14 years before the formation of the next club, in Mombasa in 1944. Eight years later the second Kenyan club followed, at Nauru in 1952. Meanwhile, the Dar-as-Salaam Club in Tanganyika had been chartered in 1944.

Uganda remained without a club until 1957 despite the considerable efforts of the Nairobi Club to spread Rotary elsewhere in East Africa. The RI Directory entry showing a club in Jinja founded in 1934 is incorrect, as archive records in both Evanston and Africa make it clear that the correct date for this club should be 1964. The first RC in Uganda was some time coming.' Indeed, it took the Rotary Club of Nairobi more than 7 years to achieve the aim of forming a Club in Kampala, which was finally chartered on 20th May 1957. The records of the Nairobi Club include several references to this:-

"Under Ernest Vase's Presidency in 1950-51 efforts continued to charter a club in Kampala, but the time was still not right. In fact the Kampala-Club-idea had to lay dormant for yet another 7 years before this dream of another offspring of the RC Nairobi would finally come true."

"President Wilfred was determined to get a Rotary Club in Kampala started during his year as President of the Rotary Club of Nairobi. He formed a special committee for this purpose, which was later asked to start a club in Kyushu as well. Unfortunately, both these projects had to be postponed because of the Mau Mau Emergency."

"The initial struggle Nairobi Rotarians endured to put down Rotary's roots in Uganda was, in no way, indicative for the future. Once the seedling was planted, which took another 5 years of intensive work, Uganda would become one of Rotary's stronghold in East Africa".

Finally, during the Presidency of Sydney Pegrume in 1956-57, all those years of work to establish a Rotary Club in Kampala finally came to fruition with the first Club in Uganda being admitted on 20th May.
Nevertheless, the idea of forming another Club in Nairobi had to be dropped and was not to become reality until 1963.

The above account has been edited by Basil Lewis from material supplied by John Savage and Friedel Liebe-Savage of the Nairobi Rotary club.

Posted by Historian Basil Lewis 5 November 2005

 

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