For the next several years he devoted a great
deal of time to reflection on conditions of life and business and, by 1905, he
had formulated a definite philosophy of business relations. Talking it over
with three of his law clients - Silvester Schiele, a coal merchant, Gustavus Loehr,
a mining engineer, and Hiram Shorey, a merchant tailor - he decided, with them,
to organize the club which he had been planning since 1900. On February 23,
1905, the club's first meeting took place and the nucleus was formed for the thousands
of Rotary clubs which were later organized throughout the world. The new
club, which Paul Harris named "Rotary" because the members met, in rotation, in their
various places of business, met with general approval and club membership grew
rapidly. Almost every member had come to Chicago from a small town and in
the Rotary club they found an opportunity for the intimate acquaintanceship of
their boyhood days. When Paul Harris became president of the club in its
third year he was anxious to extend Rotary to other cities because he was convinced
that the Rotary club could be developed into an important service movement.
The second Rotary club was founded in San Francisco
in 1908 and then other clubs were organized until in 1910, when there were 16 clubs,
it was decided that they should be united into an organization which would extend
the movement to other cities and serve as a clearinghouse for the exchange of ideas
among the clubs. Representatives from the clubs met in Chicago in August,
1910, and organized the National Association of Rotary Clubs. When clubs
were formed in Canada and Great Britain, making the movement international in
scope, the name was changed, in 1912, to the International Association of Rotary
Clubs, and in 1922 the name was shortened to Rotary International. Paul Harris
was the first president of the International Association. When he passed
away in January, 1947, he was president emeritus of Rotary International.
While Paul Harris devoted much of his time to Rotary,
he was also prominent in civic and professional work. He was the first chairman
of the board of the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults in the U.S.A.
and of the International Society for Crippled Children. He was a member of
the board of managers of the Chicago Bar Association and its representative at the
International Congress of Law at The Hague, and he was a committee member of the
American Bar Association.
Mr. Harris received the Ph.D. and LL.D. degrees from
the University of Vermont and the LL.B. degree from the University of Iowa. The
Boy Scouts of America gave him the Silver Buffalo Award and he was decorated by
the governments of Brazil, Chile, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, France and Peru.