Since
Toastmasters began, more than four million men and women
have benefited from the organization’s communication and
leadership programs.
In October 1924, a group of men assembled by
Dr. Ralph C. Smedley met in the basement of the YMCA in
Santa Ana, California, U.S.A., forming a club “to afford
practice and training in the art of public speaking and
in presiding over meetings, and to promote sociability
and good fellowship among its members.” The group took
the name “Toastmasters.” Soon men in other communities
and states asked for permission and help to start their
own Toastmasters clubs. By 1930, a federation was
necessary to coordinate activities of the many clubs and
to provide a standard program. When a speaking club in
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada, expressed
interest in forming a Toastmasters club, the group
became known as Toastmasters International.

For many years the “Home Office” of
Toastmasters International was based in a series of
rented office spaces. In 1962, the Toastmasters
International staff moved to its first World
Headquarters building in Santa Ana, California, not far
from where the first club began. By the late 1980s,
however, this building could no longer adequately house
the increased staff needed to provide services to the
growing number of Toastmasters. In 1990 World
Headquarters relocated to a new building in Rancho Santa
Margarita, approximately 20 miles south of Santa Ana,
designed to accommodate Toastmasters International’s
expected growth well into the 21st century.
Toastmasters International’s success and
growth is due in large part to the continued development
of its educational programs. The organization has come a
long way since the first speech manual, Basic Training,
was developed more than 50 years ago. The current
manual, now called Competent Communication, was most
recently updated in 2006. After members of Toastmasters
complete all 10 speech projects in that manual, they may
apply for their Competent Communicator (CC) award and
then choose from any combination of 15 advanced manuals.
Additional educational materials include the
Success/ Leadership and Success/Communication Series,
The Better Speaker Series, The Leadership Excellence
Series, and the High Performance Leadership program.
Toastmasters International’s education system includes
both a communication track and a leadership track. The
communication track award progression features the CC,
Advanced Communicator Bronze (ACB), Advanced
Communicator Silver (ACS) and Advanced Communicator Gold
(ACG); the leadership track award progression includes
Competent Leader (CL), Advanced Leader Bronze (ALB) and
Advanced Leader Silver (ALS). The Distinguished
Toastmaster (DTM) is the highest award.
In addition to the various educational
materials available through the Toastmasters
International Supply Catalog, members receive the
monthly publication, The Toastmaster magazine. Club and
district officers receive via e-mail a bimonthly
publication, TIPS, and district officers receive the
District Newsletter each month.
Toastmasters International enters the new
century as the undisputed world leader in public
speaking training, with over 10,500 clubs and more than
200,000 members in approximately 90 countries. In the
years to come, more people than ever will benefit from
Toastmasters leadership and education.