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Rotary 1921-1971
- (Written and compiled by Thomas W. Butler. 3/1/71)
If, as figures on the calendar prove beyond a doubt, the Alton Rotary Club is 50 years old, come March 1, (1971) in what manner shall a history of its experiences be composed?
- Perhaps, at this state of maturity, it is more
revealing to review the first two decades, since the last
three are fairly fresh in the minds of present-day
members. This familiarity does not necessarily breed
contempt, but the events of the '20's and '30's may serve
as a background and research for the question of
origin.
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- It has the added virtue, for this historia, of
presenting opportunity for recollection which only the
senior member of the club, Martin Bristow, can dispute
with regard to accuracy - and he's too chivalrous to
exercise this right. This virtue may be counteracted by
the necessity to include first-person references, for
which there is regret, but no apology.
Civic Leadership
- Browsing through the only records available, those of
the last 30 years, one finds accounts of directors'
meetings in which civic undertakings were given support
from the club. The survey of historic buildings;
Promotion of the West Junior High School Stadium;
Establishment of the short-lived City Manager Municipal
Government; McAdams River Road; The Belt Highway;
Obstetrics in the Wood River Club which gave the
district, Governor Art Hunter and the Bethalto Club;
Campaign and election of Ed Brown and Governor; Football
tribute dinners to the Alton teams; Ladies' night for
beaming Rotary Anns gay in flowery corsages and alluring
perfumery; Great fiscal concern over honoraria for
speakers; Records lack readability, as do most minute
books.
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- Perhaps most impressive is the record of budgets of
$1600 a year in the depression '30's contrasted with the
current reckoning for 1970, of $5192 Revenues and $6158
Disbursements; which parallels current methods of
financing among families, businesses and governments.
Principal problems were those of members delinquent in
attendance.
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- So let's go back to the first 20 years, for which the
only reliable document available is a copy of the
charter, dated March 1, 1921, signed by the most famous
international secretary, Chesley R. Perry: and an account
of the formation Feb. 23,1905, of the first Rotary Club
in Chicago by Paul P. Harris.
Organized in 1921
- Bill Reavis, Superintendent of Schools, who had
ramroded the organization of the Alton Club was its first
president and Albro Giberson secretary. There were 26
charter members, among whom were the leaders of the
industries, professions and businesses of the community.
They were delighted with the new idea of calling one
another by their first names; lifting raucous voices in
songs where volume obscured the lack of harmony;
exchanging accounts of the vagaries of their occupations,
and being required to stand up in front of their
contemporaries and make speeches; the principle that the
occupation of the lowly shoemaker was equal in dignity to
that of the banker from whom he borrowed funds to buy
leather for half-soles, so long as each rendered an
honorable service to his customer; and both buyer and
both buyer and seller benefited by their transactions.
Lessons Learned
- Early they learned the folly of trying to be a Lady
Bountiful. The river front was an unsightly landscape
with squatters' shanties, fish markets, rambling boat
docks...this of course before the locks and dam were
built. Someone proposed that this be alleviated by
dredging sand over the clay banks to improve appearances;
someone let a contract; and later the members of the club
were billed for $25 each, much to their dismay, because
there was no one else to pay the bill. Dollars were hard
come by, in those days, and it cured the club of taking
on great undertakings for many a year.
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- No collections of funds, however worthy the purpose, were allowed, nor membership based on political occupations-two principles which were later abandoned.
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- When the club reached the adult age of 25 years, the
occasion was observed with fitting ceremony, and a list
of the names of former members, 184 in number, was
compiled. Paraphrasing the Ziegfield Follies' motto
"through the portals of Rotary" had marched the humble
merchant, the top industrialist, names that built towns.
.. Milnor, Lafe, Young, Rodgers, Mathews, Beall, Blaske,
Corbett, Duncan, Ferguson, Hayes, Levis, Luer, Manbeck,
Muiroy, Olin, Sparks, Watkins, Wessel.
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- Educators marched there, too, school superintendents,
presidents of Monitcello, Shurtleff, and Western
MilitaryAcademy, and most of them served as presidents of
the club at one time or another. . . which the
industrialists did not. Sons followed them into
membership in the club.
Roll-Back of Years
- Recollections of occurrences which are clear even after the passage of so many years, seem worth reciting to give spotlight portrayals of the times: Bill Levis, making abject apologies to a zealous secretary for absence from meetings because he was commuting between here and Toledo putting together the merger of the Illinois and Owens Glass companies into an industrial giant; Dentist Don Stocker playing his coronet to lead the singing and composing a Rotary song which endured for years; John McAdams being surprised with an attendance of 100 members and guests, which got his efforts off the ground to organize the Lewis and Clark Bridge project which built the bridges in 1927; Chicago's Big Bill Thompson mooring his yacht at the foot of Piasa Street and coming to the meeting to tell of his forthcoming sea voyage to find tree-climbing frogs...and bring international trade to Chicago; Herman Schippers, of Shell, fining members with gusto for lacking buttons, being late, leaving early, and any other infraction of rules, which brought on a rebellion; Monsignor Sloan, at an inter-club golf match, shocking the clergy of Kiwanis (who had demurred at the morals of letting the losers pay for the dinners of the winners) by boldly announcing on No. 1 tee that he had $20,000 of the Bishop's money ready to bet he'd vanquish a perennial opponent.
The Best Program
- All-time tops in programs. . . Paul B. Cousley, the
most knowledgeable of Altonians, who vehemently denied
ability to make a speech; describing the life of Elijah
Lovejoy as a resdent of Hunterstown; and the
assassination which divided the citizenry and blighted
Alton's opportunity as a river port at a time it was a
neck-and-neck rival of St. Louis.
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- Bert Caldwell, dignified banker, who delighted at
being called Bert instead of Mister; describing his
concept of Rotary as a way of life second only to
religion; and bearing enduring friendship for a secretary
whose bulletin had given functional account of a winsome
miss, from who he had required some mark of
identification to cash a check; and who showed him a
birthmark just above her attractive left knee; at a time
miniskirts were never dreamed of!
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- The club secretary being elected mayor, after a three
month's campaign which not a sentence was uttered from
the rostrum on the subject; until after the election,
when the jeweler who was later to be his father-in-law
presented him with a tiepin with a diamond the size of a
hazelnut; which he naively supposed was genuine. He
should have known better, and did later...
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- The war years '41-45, and '50-53, when most every
member had a son in the armed forces, some as many as
five; Ratchet listed eight Rotarians in the service; and
club members all were on committees for the war effort;
Ralph Jackson, Frank Rhine and Lafe Young staging
blackout drills.
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- George Springman, 300 pounds of him, offering to ride
a bicycle to East Alton in the July sun, if we could
achieve a 100% attendance at any meeting; and actually
making it to Chessen's Lane for a 95% one, bathed in
sweat.
First District Meet
- Greatest effort in fellowship and cooperation in
these recollections was the District Conference in '32
when Carl Hartmann was president; so amiable was he that
anybody would do anything for him. It was the first such
undertaking of this kind for Alton in years. Four hundred
registered; sessions opened in Western Military Academy;
reviewed the parade of proud cadets; moved to the Steamer
St. Paul the second day for a cruise to the confluences
of the Missouri and Illinois...the meeting of three
mighty rivers; Luis Machado, handsome son of the
President of Cuba was the international representative,
could charm the bird out of a tree, and did. The finale
was the governor's grand ball in the W.M.A. gymnasium. A
second conference came later, when George Wilkins was
Governor, but is dim in memory. Schoolman Ray Ready was
then president and Wilkins later went on to become State
Superintendent of Public Instruction.
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- Now these are the recollections of a membership which
began in 1923, and are still cherished as memoirs of an
association in 48 years of helpful and congenial
fellowship.
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- The president ordered written an account of 50 years
of Rotary in Alton, and what it has meant.
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- In all this time, officers and members have come and
gone, but of them all, the most diligent worker, the most
devoted to principle of Service Above Self, and the most
honored by his contemporaries, is the modest editor of
the Ratchet, Louie Rupp.
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- These may be many words, but such are the little
things nice Rotary Clubs are made of.
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- Written and compiled by Thomas W. Butler. 3/1/71
1971-1982
Matured by the variety of experiences encountered in its
first half century of Service Above Self . . . with its low
charter number, 851 . . . the club fashioned its sixth
decade in more conventional channels.
Younger business and professional men became Rotarians,
found their occupations more intricate than had been those
of their predecessors, and directed their projects in
community betterment along practical lines.
Among other innovations, the Club bowed to the exodus of
business and residential locations, moved its meeting place
to the Ramada Inn on the Beltline, and changed its name to
the Alton/Godfrey Rotary Club.
Fountains, spraying fountains, became a major project
directed at improving the ecology of the city. The first was
installed at State and William Streets, followed in turn by
one at Thirteenth and Belle, a third at North State and
Belle, and a fourth in UpperAlton (at Washington Square).
This one was christened the Roger Templin Fountain in honor
of an Upper Alton partriarch who had withheld his residence
from the march of commercial development into a busy
shopping center.
One project, a playground at Thirteenth and Piasa,
designed for use of underprivileged children, cost $1,500
but failed of permanence as interest in it subsided after
its newness wore off.
Unique among its achievements was the Club's sustained
leadership in bell-ringing and gleaning contributions for
the Salvation Army's annual Tree of Lights, ramroded by Andy
Jackson who shares his name with an illustrious former
President. Year after year, the yield of Rotarians to this
charitable purpose led those of all other participating
agencies.
In the area of education and international good will, the
Club's sponsorship of sending Exchange Students to foreign
countries, intended to serve as ambassadors of American
friendship, should rate high in academic appraisal. Seven
students . . . none of them from Rotary families. . . were
sent to countries ranging from Denmark to the Indian
Ocean.
During the latter half of the decade, much of the Club's
activities have focused on helping in the development of
Alton's Gordon Moore Park. In cooperation with Kiwanis and
the Junior Service League, it shared in the installation of
a playground and the Nan Elliott Rose Garden. These
undertakings required physical labor... usually difficult to
engender in such causes. .. rather than routine payment of
costs.
Among the Club's changes in procedure has been the
decline of vocal renditions of historic Rotary songs, a
traditional feature in the routine of Rotary meetings. This
is attributed to the absence of a persuasive piano player,
leaving the only area of capable song leading in the hands
of Frank Boals, the only member gifted in the field of
music, who struggled manfully on occasion for a capella
renditions in a waning talent for harmony among the
membership.
All in all, the Club has enjoyed a constructive decade of
Rotary Service to its community as capable and progressive
officers have been chosen to direct its undertaking.
Updated by Thomas W. Butler 2/22/82
1983 - 1989
- 1983 - Restoration of the Piasa Bird. fabricated
steel hung on bluff. Donations of labor and materials
$35,000.
- 1985 - Robert Wadlow Statue. Donations of labor and
materials $110,000. Fund raising was conducted by Rotary
and Upper Alton Business Association. Bill Moyer
supervised construction. Sheppard, Morgan, and Schwaab
company provided the engineering expertise. materials
were donated by various local businesses.
- 1987 - Construction of Rotary Lodge, Boy Scout Camp
Warren Levis. Donations of labor and materials
$12,800.
- 1987/88 - Polio Plus - Rotary International project -
Immunization for all the children of the world. Three
year program. Donations $40,000.
- 1989 - D.A.R.E. van to support anti-drug program in
Alton schools. $8,000.
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1990 - 2004
The Last Flight of the
Piasa

- Indian legend has it that centuries before the white
man came to what is now southwestern Illinois, a giant
bird with antler-like horns, horrible red eyes, a
somewhat human face, a body covered with scales, and a
long serpent-like tail cruised the skies in search of
prey.
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- Just a legend? Maybe. But the image of the bird on
the bluff is real enough and has endured for centuries.
Explorer Jacques Marquette first sighted the painting In
1673 during his journey down the Mississippi River.
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- In 1983, the club developed a plan to paint the bird
on an aluminum sheet and bolt it to the bluff. The cost
of the project was estimated at $50,000. The giant bird
remained on the bluffs until 1992.
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- In 2000, Rotary received a letter from a student at
Southwestern High School. As a result of this letter,
the Piasa Bird was donated to the Southwestern school
district in 2001. The bird is now a part of the sports
complex on the grounds of the high school near Piasa,
Illinois.
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Police Department
Vests
- April, 1993 - Rod Elias and Clem Benning lead the
effort of the club to raise $8,000 for bullet proof vests
for the Alton Police Department. Sixty five officers
received vests.
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Lincoln Douglas
Square
- In 1995, $251,000 were raised with memorial bricks.to
help raise money to finance the erection of statues of
Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas. Statues are located
on the site of the historic debate in 1858 between
Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas. The statues
commemorate the 137th anniversary of the historic 1858
Alton debate between the two in their race for the
senate.
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- The unveiling followed a 35 minute dedication of the
statues. Sculptor Jerry McKenna of Boerne, Texas, called
them his best works. The sculptures were part of a
$245,000 effort by the Rotary to sell bricks and granite
blocks to pave the square and commission the statues.
McKenna, who received $105,000 for his work, was chosen
from among seven well-known sculptors.
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Bucket
Brigade
The Bucket Brigade was started in 1988 by Dale Neudecker as president of Pride, Inc. Volunteer painters from church groups, civic groups, organizations, schools, and families were responsive to the call to service. The paint was provided by Sherwin Williams and donations from other local businesses. The Telegraph was a cosponsor contributing many ads and stories.
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- This year, Bucket Brigade will paint its 1000th home.
Alton/Godfrey Rotary has been an important part of this
effort. Painting many homes themselves with individual
members serving on the board and supervising the painting
of other homes.
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Robert Wadlow
Statue
In 1985, two years after the dedication of the Piasa Bird sculpture mounted on the Mississippi River bluffs, Alton/Godfrey Rotary led a fund drive to raise $110,000 and commissioned local artist Ned Giberson to sculpt and cast the life-sized statue of Robert Wadlow, Alton's beloved Gentleman Giant, that stands on the Upper Alton campus of the Southern Illinois University School of Dental Medicine.
- The Robert Wadlow chair was dedicated in October,
2002. It is a life sized bronze replica of Robert
Wadlow's chair. The original chair was given to Franklin
Masonic Temple in Upper Alton. Because of the age and
condition of the chair, no one is allowed to sit in the
chair. This project was chaired by Scott Neudecker as the
President of Upper Alton Association, Inc. Alton/Godfrey
Rotary contributed $7,500 to the project. Bill Moyer
coordinated the installation and site construction with
the help of many Rotary volunteers. The chair was
installed and the brick and blocks were laid. The final
cost of the chair was $75,000.
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Student Of The
Month
- The Alton/Godfrey Rotary CLub initiated the Student
of the Month program in 1997 which honors outstanding
students from Alton, Marquette Catholic, and Mississippi
Valley Christian High Schools. Students selected must be
seniors and are selected on the basis of outstanding
scholarship, participation in school activities, and
involvement in community service projects and
activities.. Through the current year, 144 students will
have been honored. As part of the program, one student is
selected each year as Student of the Year which includes
a $2,500 scholarship award to be used by the students at
the college of their choice. Three of the seven students
selected for this honor have received a Bachelors Degree
and are pursuing additional graduate work or advanced
professional study.
- Program stats include: 81 Alton High Students, 72
Marquette Catholic Students, 8 Mississippi Valley
Christian School Students.
- Students of the year history:
- 1998-Ebony Huddleston, Graduate, Xavier
University;
- 1999-Kathrine Dixon, Graduate, Richmond
University;
- 2000-Tee Tee Hong, Graduate, University of
Illinois;
- 2001-Luke Slaughter, Senior, University. of
Missouri;
- 2002-Ed McPike, Junior, Northwestern University;
- 2003-Allison York, Sophomore, University of
Kansas;
- 2004-Joe Holleran, Freshman, University of
Illinois.
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Habitat
House
- Members of Rotary were inspired to build a home for
Habitat for Humanity after attending the Rotary
International Convention in 1998 in Indianapolis. Bill
Moyer, who owns Moyer Contracting Co., Alton, and White,
of White's Nursery in Godfrey are co-chairmen of the
Rotary home building project. Local businesses have
teamed up with the Rotary Club to donate material to
construct the home for a young family. Rotary provided
$10,000 of the 58,000 cost . The home was completed in
the fall of 2002.
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YWCA
Playground
- The Alton-Godfrey Rotary Club helped the Y directors
realize an important goal of constructing a playground
for participants in the Child Care Program. In 2002,
Rotary members assembled equipment and materials for the
project, and provided hundreds of volunteer hours to
construct the playground that has a total value of
$32,000.
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Oblate
Greenhouse
- In 2002, Rotary was asked to assist with a project
called the "Oblate Ecological Initiative". Rotary
provided $10,000 for materials and many hours of labor to
construct a greenhouse for the project.
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Polio
Plus
- In 1985, Rotary launched the Polio Plus program to
protect children worldwide from the cruel and fatal
consequences of polio. In 1988, the World Health Assembly
challenged the world to eradicate polio. Since that time,
Rotary's efforts and those of partner agencies, including
the World Health Organization, the United Nations
Children's Fund, the United States Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, and governments around the world,
have achieved a 99 percent reduction in the number of
polio cases worldwide. In 2003, the Alton/Godfrey Rotary
Club donated $17,000 additional funds to the Polio Plus
campaign.
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- Written and compiled by Ron Mayhew and Larry Thompson
- 2/23/05
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