• Fri. Aug 29th, 2025

Next generation gives one-hundred-year-old club new lease of life

Rotary

A long-standing membership organisation has opened a new group in Leeds, founded by a young and diverse group of residents and business people.

Rotary International was formed more than 100 years ago to unite and act to create lasting change across the globe, in local communities, and in ourselves.

The newest Leeds-based club, named Phoenix, is thought to be one of the most diverse groups in the entire rotary globally. In contrast to the average age of 74 for Yorkshire Rotary Club members, the new club has an average membership age of 34.

30-year old Chair, Sam Tasker-Grindley, a chartered accountant, led the formation of the Phoenix Club earlier this year and welcomed a mix of ages, gender, race and sexual orientation.

The newest club was officially welcomed by District Governor Robert Morphet and a traditional induction ceremony welcomed the newest recruits who are entrepreneurs and employees from a mix of sectors including accountancy, public relations, recruitment, and international trade.

The first female president for the Rotary club of Aireborough, Heather Read, welcomed the new members which includes Ellie MacDonald of MacComms, Jodie Hill, founder of Thrive Law and Jonny Waterton, ex-military turned financial advisor. Victoria Boldison of Bolst Global was the 20th member to join the club, giving Phoenix its independent status.

The club exists to support the Leeds community with Zest Health for Life’s Leeds Cookery School supported as the chosen charity for the year. Members support the charity through fundraising initiatives including dragon boat racing, cookery classes and climbing the Yorkshire three peaks.

Heather Read, President for the Rotary club of Aireborough commented:

“It is a pleasure to welcome the newest members who have joined alongside my colleagues and I who have been proud to represent the rotary for many years. We can’t wait to see how they will build on the traditions we’ve formed whilst bringing in a new lease of life.”

Phoenix Chair, Sam Tasker-Grindley added:

“I feel excited to update the long-standing traditions of Rotary. We’re not trying to reinvent the wheel but rather bring it into the 21st Century. We’re working hard to make the Rotary club of Leeds Phoenix a diverse and innovative group to support each other and give back to the community.” 

The Rotary club of Leeds Phoenix is held at Platform above Leeds train station every Tuesday 6-7pm. Visitors and new members are welcome to attend.

MacComms
Author: MacComms