Past Projects
![]() | Having been a member of Birtley Rotary Club for over twenty years you may imagine that I am enjoying the whole thing or I wouldn't have stayed around that long. As for projects I can recall two of our members receiving citations from Parliament for the work we did within the club on the Can Collection scheme, earning many thousands of pounds for charity. |
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Every year at Christmas we deliver 50 to 75 parcels to the elderly or infirm of the community, usually along with a card and our best wishes, it's not really the parcel that brings the tears but the fact that some one cares enough. Also we used to partake in Mock Interviews for potential school leavers and donate time to that invaluable project. Due to PC this is now on the back burner for the time being.
On a regular basis we think up
other new projects or ways of collecting cash for various charities and over the years have paid out cheques to Marie Curie, The Hospice, the Air Ambulance, the Lifeboat Rescue Team plus a multitude of others. We have presented all the Primary School leavers from the surrounding schools with a specially designed and printed edition of the Dictionary. We donated garden furniture to Lingey House School and presented goal posts to the Friends of Elisabethville community Centre. These and many more but we still manage to sponsor deserving young folk in the community with some amazing projects of their own.
Two of our members managed to raise £1500 by doing a wire slide over the Tyne , not a small thing considering one of them suffers from a fear of height. (Even more so now I should think.)
It would take many pages to relate all of the recipients and the many projects we have undertaken but almost any Rotary Club in the world does just as much to help their community and promote international understanding. It may appear a formidable task but we have derived a great deal of fellowship and fun in doing it. Birtley Rotarians have encouraged and entertained speakers from all over the country and beyond to their club dinners. Like them or not they were powerful speakers, e.g. Michael Heseltine, Jeffrey Archer, Leon Brittan the Belgian Ambassador and Dr. David Owen, plus several other politicians. There was Lord John Hall, Lord Brian McKenzie, the Bishop of Durham, and a multitude of other genuine speakers who needed to be heard on the Rotary forum.
On a rare occasion if we have no speaker visiting us we may call upon one of the club members to relate their own tale of woe. (Proving we really do have a good sense of humour.)
