A charter night was held in the spacious dining room of the Spring Mountain House, gaily decorated with Rotary emblems and flags, on May 5, 1931, with one hundred forty-four Rotarians from Allentown, Catasuqua, Boyertown, Pennsburg, East Greenville, Paoli-Malvern-Berwyn, Phoenixville, Norristown, Spring City, Perkasie, North Wales, Souderton and Pottstown present.
"Chris" Stouffer, President of the Pottstown Rotary Club, presented the newly chartered club with a beautiful Rotary gong and gavel. George Rotz, secretary of the Pottstown Club, presented each member with a copy of the "Four Objects of Rotary" and a membership certificate.
Club meetings were held were held at the Spring Mountain House, Krupp,s Hotel, and at Gratersford Hotel before moving to the Schwenksville Community Library, the present meeting place. Walter Beltz prepares the meals which are served by volunteer help.
At various times in its history, the club has assisted members of the community by providing glasses for school children, braces for crippled children, student loans, and by contributing to various community organizations.
The Club has also contributed to the Rotary Foundation which provides scholarships for foreign students in the United States and for American students who go abroad.
One of the most ambitious projects of the Club resulted from the rationing of gasoline during World War II. At the suggestion of Franklin H. Renninger, a Community Service Committee was formed. This group sponsored all kinds of entertainment for residents who could no longer drive their cars to seek pleasures elsewhere. The program included vaudeville and minstrel shows, moving pictures, dances, and outdoor carnivals. The committee also sponsored baseball and basketball teams, purchased uniforms for the school band and bleachers. The committee gave parties at Christmas and Easter for young and old. The Community Service Committee ceased its work in 1951.
Another club project involved the purchase of a property on Cemetery Road in February, 1966. The land was bought from Norman Kulp for the sum of $4,500.00. The field was used by the local little league teams and serves as the summer meeting site for the Club. From the end of May until the end of September, the club meets under a Pavilion erected by its own members. The Club financed payment for the field with $1000.00 down and then worked off the balance by annual payments from Club funds, raised by such events as the well-known Sunday breakfasts.
Summer meetings at the field feature, baseball and volleyball. The baseball games with Collegeville, and Upper Perkiomen Rotary are regular features of the summer season. Also in the summer comes the annual family picnic held on the lawn of the Shaffer-Ziegler families. Wives and children attend along with the Club members. The Club also sponsors an annual Christmas party for the families in December.
During 1979-80, the Club supported the 3H Program: Health, Hunger and Humanity.
Robert Cope and Michael C. Billett