Membership Information
Annual membership runs January through December.
- Individual Resident: $25
- Couple Resident: $40
- Individual Non-Resident: $30
- Couple Non-Resident:
$45
Membership provides access to programs, activities, and special events.
Grinnell Hall Senior Center provides recreational, cultural, educational, and social programs for adults age 50 and older in the Greater Beloit area. Our goal is to support healthy aging by offering engaging activities, nutritious meals, and opportunities to connect with others in the community.
Annual membership runs January through December.
Membership provides access to programs, activities, and special events.
Grinnell Hall is a Rock County Nutrition Program dining site.
We offer a variety of programs for adults age 50 and older, including:
Programs are offered weekdays between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.
Grinnell Hall is committed to providing a welcoming, friendly environment where people 50 and over can take advantage of lifelong learning opportunities and learn to be the best they can be. Life is meant to be lived.
We love and depend on our volunteers at Grinnell Hall! Without the help and hours of time and talent our volunteers share, Grinnell Hall would not be able to offer all the events/activities that we do. Grinnell Hall recognizes the value of volunteers and provide them with meaningful and engaging work.
Below are our three main volunteer opportunities. If you believe you can support Grinnell with a volunteer opportunity not listed, please reach out.
Nutrition Volunteer
Did you know Rock County serves
lunch daily at Grinnell Hall? They are
always looking for committed volunteers to help prepare and serve meals. Not wanting to handle food? Then we could use
you to help clear meals and do some light dishwashing. Nutrition volunteers typically work 10:00 am
-12:30 pm or sometime within that frame
Volunteer Instructors
Do you have a special or niche
skill you’d like to share with others? At Grinnell Hall we rely on volunteer
instructors for the majority of our programs.
Whether it’s a health and fitness, dance, crafts, writing, or one-time
class, reach out and we’ll see how we can partner.
General Volunteer
If you wish to volunteer, please contact us.
Grinnell Hall, which houses Beloit’s senior center was built on the site of what once held one of the finest houses in the city. Known as the Lee home, it featured seven archways across its sprawling first floor, a second story in its midsection and a cupola atop that.
Nellie Clark, wife of George Clark, a dry goods merchant in Beloit, had lived in the home since childhood. She was an animal lover who had pets and birds. She was particularly fond of a canary named Dick. When her feathered friend died in 1886, she carefully placed it in a tin marshmallow box, on a blue satin ribbon with its head on a tiny white silk pillow. She buried it in one of the home’s 18-inch-thick limestone walls.
The home must have fallen into disrepair by the mid-1930s because it was torn down to make way for Grinnell Memorial Hall, completed in 1937. The hall was built after Emma E. Grinnell, who was active in patriotic organizations, bequeathed $100,000 to build a memorial for her husband, William, who died in 1925. The hall was to be used by all of Beloit’s patriotic organizations. William H. Grinnell was a civil War veteran who was once a department commander of the Grand Army of the Republic. He also was one of four young men who organized the Beloit Iron Works (Beloit Corp.) in the 1880s.
While demolishing the Lee home 50 years after Nellie Clark laid to rest her little canary, workers discovered the tiny box with “Dick” scratched on it. Besides the well-preserved bird inside, they found two notes.
One read: “If in the years to come any one should find this box, please bury it again just as you find it. It holds the oldest and most knowing bird in America. I loved him and shall miss him for years. N.C.”
The second, according to a story written by Pat Casucci, was a tribute to her “dear little bird,” written in hopes Dick would someday find wings in a land ever green and ever summer, where old age never comes, where the bird could sing glad songs with many others.
Paul B. Kennedy, construction superintendent for Grinnell Memorial Hall, carried out Nellie’s wishes. A 1936 photo shows him, with top hat, sport coat and tie, while blue-collar construction workers observed, placing the little tin box containing the bird in a new concrete wall of Grinnell Memorial Hall.
Unfortunately, veterans organizations struggled to operate the hall due to lack of funds. In 1975, the city acquired it with “consideration of mutual agreements.” In 1977, the city acquired federal money to create Grinnell Senior Center.
Grinnell Hall Directors
Christie Thomsen; 1977 – 1985
Sandy Rothe; 1985 – 1988
Lila Murray & Chris Lewis; 1988
John Kalkirtz; 1988 – 2012
Paula Schutt; 2013 – 2018
Debbie Kraus; 2018 – 2024
Ashley Cooper; 2025 to present
The Director meets monthly with an advisory board, comprised of members of the center.