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A. E. Gray

One of AE
Gray's chief interests between 1926 and 1946 was the rotary
movement, and he is credited with the founding of the Rotary
Club of Stoke-On-Trent. A surviving minute book records that on
the 17th October 1928 he presided at a meeting of six local
business and professional men at which he reported a meeting
with major (later Sir Charles) Mander, then Chairman of the
Rotary District in which Stoke would come and later the
President of Rotary in Britain and Northern Ireland.
One of Gray's
business associates was Charles E White of Belfast, a senior
Rotarian and a business acquaintance and another was a Rotarian
customer in Toronto who originally introduced him to the
movement.
Three more
meetings were held during which more potential members were
recruited and the Rotary club was inaugurated with sixteen
founder members on the 31st January 1927.
Gray having
presided over all the preliminary meetings would have been the
natural choice for founder president but was able to recruit for
this position Major Frank Wedgwood, head of the family firm and
Great Great Grandson of the first Josiah. Gray following him as
president a year later.
For nearly
twenty years Gray was a keen and active member of the club and
it became his ambition to extend Rotary to a wider circle by
establishing other clubs in the city. Having failed to achieve
this ambition as it was turned down by the members in meetings
in 1942 and 1946, may have been one of the reasons for his
resignation later that year
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