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Section Chair - RGHF senior historian Basil Lewis, UK FIRST IN EACH REGION

DISTRICTING IN RIBI

In the early days of Rotary, there was no need to have any regional or area organisation, but as the number of clubs increased so there was a need for some smaller units than just the one organisation. A system of 'Divisions' was introduced by the Rotary Convention in 1912 in Duluth, and three years later, these became 'Districts', a name that has remained in use ever since. Each was given an identity number. As the number of these districts grew from the original six to the present figure of over 525, it became necessary to create a further division called 'zones', each comprising between 12 and 18 districts; that, however, is another story.

In 1915 the Rotary Clubs in Britain were combined into a single district, then known as Rotary District 19, the other 18 all being in North America. When the World War ended in 1918, there were only 22 clubs in the country. It was clear, however, that in the following years many more clubs would be created and to take account of future development, a British districting system was organised in 1918 with 6 districts. These were:

1 The North of England which had four clubs, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds
and Newcastle,
2 The Midlands with Birmingam, Derby, Leicester and Nottingham
3 The South East with London, Southampton, Brighton, Bournemouth and
Portsmouth
4 The West and Wales with Bristol, Cardiff and Llanelly
5 Scotland with Aberdeen , Edinburgh, Glasgow and Perth
6 Ireland with Belfast and Dublin.


The continuing growth of Rotary led to this being modified in 1920 with 2 extra districts; the old number 2 being split into 2 'Midlands West', and 3 'Midlands East' while the old 4 became 5 the South West and 6 Wales. These were British Districts as opposed to the Rotary International one which in 1921 became Rotary District 24 for the whole of GB and I.

However, the following July, RIBI was separated out of RI's Districting System and for some 15 years British Rotary used its own numbers and district organisation, although these became recognized by RI's official
directory in 1931. By then there were 16 districts in RIBI with Scotland having 1 and 2 and Ireland 15 and 16.

For various reasons, both Scotland and Ireland refused to be divided. In 1927, a new District 14 covering Surrey and West Sussex was created, and in 1928, Devon and Cornwall became District 17. There were other minor boundary changes in the following years with new districts being formed for North Wales (1935) and another for North West England (1947). In 1951, Scotland finally agreed to a division of their country into 2 districts.

In August 1937, the RI Directory combined all the RIBI Districts with the rest of the world, keeping the RIBI numbers unchanged. This remained the situation until July 1957 when the Board of RI changed the RIBI numbers by adding 100 to the base figure so that, for example, 4 became 104 and 7 became 107. In the succeeding years, there were occasions when some districts were split or re-aligned again; thus, in 1972-73, District 107 split and some clubs were allocated into District 122. A further change occurred in 1985 when a new District 127 was created out of parts of District 104, 107 and 122.

In 1986 District 105 was divided and part became 128 while 3 years later district 117 was also divided so that part became 129. After this, there were no more changes until 1991 when, throughout the Rotary world, district numbers were increased to four digits so that 101 became 1010 and so on.

RGHF senior historian Basil Lewis 26 October 2005, amended 3 August 2006, amended 21 July 2008, with acknowledgements to Norman Proctor's 'RIBI 1975-2005' Annex C

 

 
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