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Tour of Room 711 |
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![]() History and Archives Manager Stephanie Giordano, 711 Club President Dick Galitz, and Deputy General Secretary Pete DeBerge cut the ribbon at the dedication of Room 711 at RI World Headquarters in Evanston, 21 February 2014.
![]() The original Room 711 was in a downtown Chicago building, where it had been preserved as a museum room by Chicago Rotarians until the building was demolished in 1989. Before the wrecker's ball hit, Rotarians removed the doors, wood trim, radiators, ceiling lights, furniture, and décor. The room was reassembled in One Rotary Center and a dedication ceremony was held in 1994. Twenty years later, the room was rebuilt and rededicated on the first floor of Rotary's World Headquarters in Evanston, IL, USA. Today, visitors can walk around the office and imagine the setting of the first Rotary meeting. An Edison Dictaphone machine, check printer, and mimeograph machines that would have been found in many early 20th century offices are on display. Tools common to the mining trade are also included in the room. ![]() 711 Club President Dick Galitz at the dedication of Room 711 at RI World Headquarters in Evanston, 21 February 2014 By Dick Galitz, president of the 711 Club, at the re-dedication of Room 711 on the first floor of RI World Headquarters in Evanston, Illinois, USA It's very special to be standing in front of the rededicated Room 711 on this occasion. It is a special room. When you go into the room, you can just feel, I can feel, the atmosphere and sense of four guys getting together and saying "let's build a fellowship." When they first started, they were talking about business exchange. But within a very short period of time the concept of service came about. They said we have to do more than just be businessmen to businessmen. It's an opportunity to be of service to others. ![]() Everyone was impressed with what the room said to them and the feeling that they got about the starting of Rotary International. Rotary history is very important to me. I think it's important to Rotary and should remain important because it's our story, it's like a family history. And we are sharing that history. (PDG Dick, RGHF agrees) For more information on tours of One Rotary Center, click on "Center Tours". Photo Credit: Rotary International Audio/Visual Department Room 711 of the Unity Building at 127 Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois was the office of mining engineer, Gustavus Loehr, who joined Rotary briefly, due to business pressures had to resign and died shortly after that. See Paul Harris' comments from "This Rotarian Age." |
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