
We are seeking donations of goods and services to put on, under and near our trees for this year’s Spectacle and it is sure to be even more amazing than last year.
NewsBerlin's Kiwanis Parade and Rockland's Jingle Bell Express made it into the November Kiwanis International Update.. More


Aktion Club is the only service club for adults with disabilities, with more than 9,000 members worldwide.. More

In New Orleans, jazz fills the streets, mingling with the aroma of hot beignets. Pralines stick in your teeth as you watch the riverboats paddle by. It’s sensory overload in this little corner of the American South that’s big on European flavor. It’s a place like no other. It’s New Orleans. And you’re different here.
So come be a part of the big crowd that’s expected in New Orleans for convention! Experience the workshops, entertainment, business and celebration of 25 years of women in Kiwanis. Together, let’s recognize our successes and make plans for the future.
Stimulate your senses in New Orleans, June 28-July 1!



THE 30’S AND 40’S
In the past,
the main emphasis of Kiwanis was on the under-privileged
child, born at the time of the nation’s worst depression,
which was to last over ten years. We had a ready challenge.
The following is a list of some of our accomplishments during
the early years.
Our big project was furnishing fresh
milk and hot lunches to children in the Barnstable and
Dennis-Yarmouth schools. While no accurate figures are
available, it is estimated that over 10,000 half-pint
containers of milk and over 8000 hot lunches were furnished in
one year.
In 1930 the first annual Christmas Party for
under privileged children took place. Over seventy-five
children were entertained and each received goodies and
Christmas gifts. The next year (1931) the first Halloween
party was sponsored. This was an annual event for many years.
Over two-hundred children took part in the parties, starting
with a parade and ending with entertainment and
refreshments.
The club outfitted children from the
inside out with clothing – paid doctor’s bills – purchased eye
glasses and other necessities. We undertook orthodontic
treatment, lasting 2½ years, for one girl. Ever since 1944
when members of the club donated seventeen pints of blood to
the American Red Cross, the Blood Program has been an
important project of the club. In addition to individual
members donating blood, the club sponsored a Bloodmobile Bank
program. While no quantitative figures are available, it is
estimated that club members have donated two-thousand pints of
blood to the Cape Cod Chapter of the American Red Cross.
During this time Pee Wee Hockey teams and Little League
Baseball and Basketball teams were sponsored.
With the
establishment and/or expansion of many government funded
social programs in existence today, much of our assistance to
under privileged children has been eliminated.
THE
50’S AND 60’S
In the 50’s the annual Kiddies Day held
at Otis Air Force Base was always a big event when over
five-hundred children were transported for a day of fun and
games. Throughout the year we sponsored swimming and life
saving courses which were conducted in the Otis Air Force Base
pool. We also honored the entire Barnstable Police Department
at a dinner. At this time the department consisted of 39
members. The Judges of the two District Courts also
attended.
On another occasion, all the Postmasters
on the Cape were invited to one of our dinners. Eleven
Postmasters were present. The club has held a recognition
night when an outstanding citizen or group has been cited for
service to the community. We continue this policy today. We
were deeply involved in local schools. The club presented
fifty-star American flags to all schools in Barnstable and
Yarmouth. Our club sponsored the creation of the first Key
Club on the Cape at Barnstable High School in 1955. Later we
would sponsor another at Dennis-Yarmouth High School. Both Key
Clubs continue to be active to this day.
The club
continued its various community service projects, some more
meaningful than others. Over five thousand seedlings were
planted in the town of Barnstable and over 400 shade trees
were planted to replace those destroyed by Hurricane Donna
(1960). Five Blue Spruce trees were planted at the Marston’s
Mills Elementary School. Members assisted in landscaping of
the old Barnstable High School, and helped in the research of
the Dutch Elm Disease, which hopefully helped preserve the
life of some of these beautiful trees that were rapidly
disappearing. Some of our projects were insightful. The club
spearheaded a drive for a Community College on Cape Cod, which
was terminated with the construction of Cape Cod Community
College in 1961. Also during the 60’s the club sponsored and
worked closely with the 4-H Club. We purchased over 300
chickens for its members and even raised a heifer for a 4-H
boy. The club also sponsored yearly camperships for needy
children who go to the Boy Scouts, Camp Fire Girls and Girl
Scouts Summer camps. Five boats were purchased for the Camp
Greenough Boy Scout Camp.
Over the years, the club has
furnished television sets, wheel chairs and hospital beds to
the Cape Cod Hospital and contributed to the Hospital Building
Fund. It has contributed to the Hyannis Library Building Fund,
supported the founding of the Cape Cod Mental Retarded
Association, and organized a benefit ball with the Falmouth
Kiwanis Club for the Mental Health Association. In cooperation
with the Red Cross Chapter, the club recruited drivers and
station wagons to transport ex-servicemen and members of their
families to Boston hospitals, and recruited drivers for the
evacuation of ambulatory patients in case of
disaster.
For many years we showed motion pictures at
the Barnstable House of Correction and furnished carpentry
tools, books and magazines. The then Sheriff Donald Tulloch
(1969) wrote of this great contribution the club had made to
the morale and rehabilitation of inmates at the jail. We also
held and annual Halloween Party for hundreds of local children
at the U.S.O. building on Main Street.
THE 70’S AND
80’S
During this time the club had about
sixty to eighty active members. Regular meetings were held at
The Sheraton Inn (Dunfey’s). In the early 70’s we built a
cabin at a 4H Camp in Brewster as part of our community
service. Many of our members helped out. The cabin still
stands today. The club was doing some tangible long-term work
during this time. Community service activities included
contributing $1,150 to the Red Cross Chapter for the purchase
of a Recusci Baby and recording Recusci Anne to be used for
CPR Training.
The club also began having an annual
booth at the Barnstable County Fair. Members had to open the
booth at 6am to sell breakfasts for many of the fair’s staff.
We sold hamburgers, hotdogs, cigarettes, candy and anything
else we could find at the time! It was a good fundraiser for
us for many years. Yes. Cigarettes.
We also had a
similar booth at Otis Air Force Base during their annual air
show. This was a great recruiting tool for us. The joint
Kiwanis – ARC programs were extremely publicized, encouraging
business firms and individuals to avail themselves or their
employees in the life saving training experience.
In addition to our normal community
service activities, our members were now part of New the great
programs that our members were instrumental in founding and
executing. Our club members in these leadership capacities
helped standardize many of the district's communications and
programs. The club was deeply involved in the Key Club at
Barnstable High School at this time. In 1987, Gene Burman
became the New England District Governor. He is still the only
member of the club to reach this office.
THE 90’S TO
THE PRESENT
As times change, so do the priorities of
our membership. During the 90’s the club membership began to
drop. This was also a national issue. For many years we hung
in there with 40-50 members. Soon we were under forty. Even
with this fewer numbers, we still produced and did some great
fundraising with some new events.
Throughout the 90’s, members Ray DuBois,
Jim Salts and George Poyant ran the Gleaners Food Bank on
behalf of our club, procuring bread and other foods from local
supermarkets and bakery’s and delivering by our own Kiwanis
Bread Truck to needy organizations multiple days a week. We
also became deeply involved with Special Olympics volunteering
every May at Barnstable High School during the annual Special
Olympics competition.
The Town of Barnstable began its
annual Kids Day. Also held at Barnstable High School in July,
the club serves over a thousand hot dogs during the event to
all the participating children and their families. On July
4th, the annual picnic and celebration in Barnstable Village
continues to grow. Our club has been serving hot dogs,
hamburgers and cold drinks to the local crowds. Today our club
is growing and vibrant. We have set Membership as a high
priority because “With More..We Can Do More..”
Our new
members are motivated and creative. Our club still has many
members that have seen what it was like when Kiwanis was
running on all cylinders during the 60’s and 70’s.
Our
seasoned members continue to motivate all of us to give what
we can to the greater good. They serve as a bridge to our
unique and colorful past. KPTI and the RHCI continue to be
major emphasis points, and serving the local children and
families in our community are still priority one.
Our
members continue to seek higher office and become involved
with the Division and New England District. Most recently in
2008, Brian Morrison was elected Lt. Governor for the Cape
& Islands division.
The “Last Gasp” bike ride from
Sagamore to Provincetown was initiated, and in the beginning
our club was one of the principle benefactors. Our club made
donations to many local charities including KPTI, and the RHCI
as part of a Division program. We have donated to Cape Cod
Hospital, Children’s Cove and the Boy’s and Girls clubs. Our
club held a successful annual Golf Tournament for many years
until 2007. This was initially a great fundraiser but soon,
every service club or non-profit was competing with us and it
became more and more difficult to find the proper location,
date, players and sponsors.