An icon of community service marks 65 years

The values of Rotary International are expressed in the organization’s motto: “Service Above Self.” Those three words are simple, yet powerful in their message. How many of us can live up to such a charge, putting service to others above even our own needs? For Salisbury’s Rotary Club, the answer is hundreds upon hundreds who have been members and officers over 65 years. And in the club’s 65 years of existence, there have been 65 presidents who led the clubs in activities and weekly meetings to support the Rotary mission locally and across the globe.

The Rotary Club of Salisbury celebrated its 65th anniversary last Friday, Oct. 24 (see story, page A4), at The White Hart inn in Salisbury. It was a sparkling and spirited evening, with old friends reconnecting and new friends becoming acquainted, all having one thing in common: a belief in Rotary’s values. 

What has the club achieved in 65 years? This will only skim the surface: $300,000 in college scholarships to 394 students; $200,000 in gifts to community nonprofit organizations; years of Rotary Interact Club sponsorship at Housatonic Valley Regional High School; donating the bandwagon to the town of Salisbury; “Welcome Home” scholarships for technical and medical training; hosting Youth Exchange students; sponsoring Fourth of July fireworks annually at Lime Rock Park and Election Day breakfasts in Salisbury (there will be one on Tuesday, Nov. 4). Internationally, the club provided equipment to the Albert Schweitzer Hospital and funded a dam in Haiti; prostheses to land-mine victims in Cambodia; water filters for 100 schools in Argentina and shelter boxes for emergency relief around the world.

The communities of the Northwest Corner have benefited greatly from the support of the Rotary Club of Salisbury. All those who have worked so hard over the years to fulfill the club’s mission are to be commended. Their work has changed their communities for the better. Here’s to the next 65 years for the club, with thanks and kudos for the first 65.

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