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Rotary in Britain and Ireland (R.I.B.I.) was created in 1914...

 

 
... under the nomenclature of the British Association of Rotary Clubs (B.A.R.C.). The name did not please Irish Rotarians (who were outvoted) but at this time, Ireland was still a part of the United Kingdom and governed from London. The more accurate description of RIBI was adopted in 1922.

 

British Rotarians first attended the 1913 Buffalo Convention where R W Pentland of Edinburgh Rotary Club was created Vice-President for the British Isles. Previously, the Canadian Acting President of the London Club, Arthur Bigelow was made a Director in 1912/3 the year before Pentland was made Vice President. By 1914/5 there were 2 Vice Presidents in D.F.Cooke and W.H.Alexander. Afterwards, Pentland engaged in the objective of bringing the other seven Rotary Clubs of Britain and Ireland together and called a meeting at Liverpool for October 30th 1913.

 

The British Association was officially constituted on May 4th 1914. R W Pentland was elected the first President of B.A.R.C. Dublin’s William Findlater was elected Vice-President (who also became a Director of the IARC in 1913/4) while another Edinburgh Rotarian, Tom Stephenson (who succeeded the enigmatic Stuart Morrow as Edinburgh Rotary Club secretary) became the Association secretary. ‘Dr Tom’- as the retail chemist was affectionately known- would play a pivotal role in the development of Rotary in Britain. Stuart Morrow would become a member of the first Board of Directors of B.A.R.C.

 

Stephenson attended the 1914 Convention in Houston, Texas where he addressed the audience on the subject of  “Rotary in Great Britain and Ireland”. At Houston, resolution number 3 recognised the newly created British Association as a “necessary and desirable institution, to which a hearty welcome is extended”. The formation of B.A.R.C was accepted by the International Association, according to Ches Perry, in order to prevent a truly independent rival organization emerging.
 


Stephenson would also propose a resolution to the 1914 Convention that would shape British Rotary’s quasi-autonomous future. Dr Tom made it clear to delegates that British Rotarians wanted to be consulted in regard to any further expansion work carried out by Stuart Morrow. This motion effectively ended Morrow’s expansionist work in Great Britain and Ireland.

 

With official recognition of the British Clubs own association, chartering of Rotary Clubs was carried out by both BARC and IARC. The British clubs were actively ‘encouraged’ to affiliate to the International Association but the initial constitution did not make it compulsory (until a change in the constitution in 1916).

 

London was the first Club to officially affiliate to Chicago HQ at  $1 dollar per head. The Celtic Clubs of Ireland and Scotland under the leadership of Belfast Rotarian Hugh Boyd objected to this subscription level and successfully argued for a rate of one shilling per capita (approx 20 cents). Thus, Rotarians from the British Isles, from the very beginning, established their special status.

 

The outbreak of the First World War in August 1914 would ensure that B.A.R.C. was here to stay. War effectively severed the direct links between Chicago and London due to the German U-boats and the expansion of Rotary in the British Isles was now a task for the Rotarians of Britain and Ireland alone.

 

Sources:

C R Hewitt - Towards My Neighbour

Roger Levy - Rotary in Great Britain and Ireland

David Shelley Nicholl - The Golden Wheel

 

Calum Thomson

THE NEGOTIATIONS IN 1921 BETWEEN THE IARC AND THE BARC  
   
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