Christine Greene and Lauri Berry receive Key Club’s highest honor.
By Destiny Cherry
Two Key Club International volunteers were recently recognized with the organization’s highest service award: The Key of Honor, which acknowledges a volunteer’s lifelong positive impact upon youth in general and Key Club specifically.
The Key Club International Board presented Lauri Berri (above right) of St. Joseph, Michigan, U.S., and Christine Greene (above left) of Saco, Maine, U.S., with the 2025 awards during the Key Club International Convention in Orlando, Florida, U.S., in July.
Christine Greene
Greene’s Key Club journey began in 1985, when she became the faculty advisor at Hermon High School in Hermon, Maine, where she taught English for 31 years. In 2001, Greene joined the New England & Bermuda Key Club District Board as an area advisor. There she mentored Key Club International club officers, ran training workshops and helped edit member newsletters.
Greene held her teaching, faculty advisor and adult area advisor positions until her retirement from Hermon High School in 2012. From there, she spent the next 13 years serving as a volunteer adult area advisor in her district.
A former member of Greene’s Key Club and current lieutenant governor, Kayla Adams — as well as other former members and coworkers — had no shortage of compliments about Greene.
“Mrs. Greene always strived to get the best out of her students,” Adams says. “For many she was more than just an advisor; she was a mentor and a role model. She always strived to push her leaders to be the best that they could be.”
Greene is the first woman from the New England & Bermuda District to receive this award. Her dedication has also been recognized through the placement of her name on the Kiwanis International Tablet of Honor, which recognized recipients’ dedication to Kiwanis, their club or their community.
Greene officially retired from her duties in April 2025 after 40 years of service to Key Club and 35 years of teaching.
Lauri Berry
Berry currently teaches at St. Joseph High School. She became the founding faculty advisor for the St. Joseph High School Key Club in 2005, a role she has held for 20 years.
Before founding her school’s Key Club, Berry offered guidance and mentorship to students as the culinary arts teacher, baking club advisor, blood drive coordinator and musical costume designer. Afterward, she added three new roles: Kiwanis International convention chaperone, district board parent volunteer and chaperone, and district convention awards coordinator and judge.
Last year, Berry was awarded the 2024 Michigan District of Key Club Outstanding Faculty Advisor Award.
She is also an active member of the St. Joseph/Benton Harbor Kiwanis Club. Renea Callery, a Michigan District past governor and Student Learning Programs chair, recalls Berry being “equally committed to the ideals of Kiwanis, fostering strong partnerships between the Key Club and our local Kiwanis chapter.”
In her letter of summation for Berry’s nomination, 2024-25 Michigan District Secretary Layla Garcia wrote: “Mrs. Berry excels at inspiring students to become compassionate, responsible and engaged citizens, as shown by the international vice president, four district governors and countless other district board members who have come from her Key Club.”