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Cub Scout Pack 16
(Alton, Illinois)
 
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 The History of Scouting


Father of the worldwide brotherhood of Scouting,
Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell of Gilwell
 (Feb. 22 1857 - Jan. 8, 1941)

Scouting's history goes back to the turn of the 20th century to a British Army officer, Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell. While stationed in India, he discovered that his men did not know basic first aid or the elementary means of survival in the outdoors. Baden-Powell realized he needed to teach his men many frontier skills, so he wrote a small handbook called Aids to Scouting, which emphasized resourcefulness, adaptability, and the qualities of leadership that frontier conditions demanded.

After returning from the Boer War, where he became famous by protecting the small town of Mafeking for 217 days, Baden-Powell was amazed to find that his little handbook had caught the interest of English boys. They were using it to play the game of scouting.

Baden-Powell had the vision to see some new possibilities, and he decided to test his ideas on boys. In August 1907, he gathered about 20 boys and took them to Brownsea Island in a sheltered bay off England's southern coast. They set up a makeshift camp that would be their home for the next 12 days.

The boys had a great time! They divided into patrols and played games, went on hikes, and learned stalking and pioneering. They learned to cook outdoors without utensils. Scouting began on that island and would sweep the globe in a few years.

The next year, Baden-Powell published his book Scouting for Boys, and Scouting continued to grow. That same year, more than 10,000 Boy Scouts attended a rally held at the Crystal Palace; a mere two years later, membership in Boy Scouts had tripled.

 
Founder of Boy Scouts of America,
William D. Boyce (June 16, 1858 – June 11, 1929)
 is aided by an "Unknown Scout" while lost in the London Fog in 1909.
 

American Origins

About this same time, the seeds of Scouting were growing in the United States. On a farm in Connecticut, a naturalist and author named Ernest Thompson Seton was organizing a group of boys called the Woodcraft Indians; and Daniel Carter Beard, an artist and writer, organized the Sons of Daniel Boone. In many ways, the two organizations were similar, but they were not connected. The boys who belonged had never heard of Baden-Powell or of Boy Scouts, and yet both groups were destined to become Boy Scouts one day soon.

But first, an American businessman had to get lost in the fog in England. Chicago businessman and publisher William D. Boyce was groping his way through the fog when a boy appeared and offered to take him to his destination. When they arrived, Boyce tried to tip the boy, but the boy refused and courteously explained that he was a Scout and could not accept payment for a Good Turn.

Intrigued, the publisher questioned the boy and learned more about Scouting. He visited with Baden-Powell as well and became captured by the idea of Scouting. When Boyce boarded the transatlantic steamer for home, he had a suitcase filled with information and ideas. And so, on February 8, 1910, Boyce incorporated the Boy Scouts of America.

The "unknown Scout" who helped him in the fog was never heard from again, but he will never be forgotten. His Good Turn is what brought Scouting to our country.

After the incorporation of the BSA, a group of public-spirited citizens worked to set up the organization. Seton became the first Chief Scout of the BSA, and Beard was made the national commissioner.

The first executive officer was James E. West, a young man from Washington who had risen above a tragic boyhood and physical disability to become a successful lawyer. He dedicated himself to helping all children to have a better life and led the BSA for 32 years as the Chief Scout Executive.

Scouting has grown in the United States from 2,000 Boy Scouts and leaders in 1910 to millions strong today. From a program for Boy Scouts only, it has spread into a program including Tiger Cubs, Cub Scouts, Webelos Scouts, Boy Scouts, Varsity Scouts, and Venturers.

 

The Beginning of Cub Scouting

Back in England, younger boys were eager to become Boy Scouts. In 1914, Baden-Powell began implementing a program for younger boys that was based on Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book. The Wolf Cub program began in 1916, and since that time, Wolf Cubbing has spread to other European countries with very little change.

In America, hundreds of Cub Scout-age boys and their families were clamoring for a program of their own. As early as 1920, Scout executives at the first national training conference discussed the needs of younger boys. The BSA, however, felt it wise to postpone any action until there was more objective evidence.

In 1925, Dr. Huber W. Hurt, a research psychologist and veteran Scouter, was authorized to study existing organizations for younger boys, such as Boy Rangers, Boy Pioneers, American Eagles, and Boys' Clubs. He found that only one boy in 50 participated regularly in any type of organized leisure-time program. He also found that younger boys responded better to leadership and program efforts than older boys. He worked closely with Ernest Thompson Seton. Both men recommended that the BSA adopt a program for younger boys, with older Boy Scouts as leaders, to tie into home, church, school, and Boy Scouting.

The National Executive Board authorized the Chief Scout Executive to thoroughly investigate the matter. An advisory committee worked with the BSA to develop a plan and produce the necessary literature. Advice was obtained from leading psychologists, sociologists, teachers, school superintendents, professors of education, college executives, and recreation and welfare directors.

By 1929, the new Cubbing program (it wasn't called "Cub Scouting" until several years later) was taking shape and was introduced as a demonstration project in a limited number of communities. Its structure was similar to today's Cub Scouting, except that dens were led by Boy Scout den chiefs. The plan included a neighborhood mothers' committee to encourage Cubs and den chiefs.

In 1930, Cub Scouting was formally launched, with 5,102 boys registered at the end of that first year. By 1933 the time had come to promote Cub Scouting throughout the country as a part of Scouting. All experimental restrictions were removed, and the first national director of Cub Scouting was appointed.

Den mother registration was optional for the first few years. By June 1938, 1,100 den mothers had registered and soon became an important part of Cub Scouting.

The first dens met weekly at a member's home, where boys played games and enjoyed crafts and ceremonies. The pack met weekly or semimonthly for games, den competitions, awards, stunts, and other activities. Cubs advanced from Bobcat (for all new members) to Wolf (age 9), Bear (age 10), and Lion (age 11) and joined a Boy Scout troop at age 12.

In 1949, the age requirement was lowered to between 8 and 10 for Cub Scouts. In 1982, Tiger Cubs was started based on shared leadership of boy-adult partner teams and the school year calendar. In 1986, Cub Scouts could register as second-grade boys.

Cub Scouting in America is different from the younger-boy programs of other countries because it is centered in the home and neighborhood. With the encouragement of family and leaders, boys enjoy a program that covers a wide variety of interesting things. It suggests activities that boys enjoy doing on their own when adults are not supervising them. These activities are particularly suited to boys of Cub Scout age and are different from those they will encounter in Boy Scouting.

A strong influence from Kipling's Jungle Book remains today. The terms "Law of the Pack," "Akela," "Wolf Cub," "grand howl," "den," and "pack" all come from the Jungle Book. At the same time, the Gold and Silver Arrow Points, Webelos emblem, and Arrow of Light emblem are taken from our American Indian heritage.

Baden-Powell's Legacy

Although Scouting has changed over the years, the ideals and aims have remained the same: character growth, citizenship training, and personal fitness. Scouting is updated periodically to keep pace with a changing world. It isn't the same as it was on Brownsea Island in 1907, but the ideals are still based on principles that Baden-Powell had been taught as a boy.

Scouting's founder was never able to completely overcome his surprise at Scouting's worldwide appeal. As it swept the globe, Scouting brought him new adventures and responsibilities as Chief Scout of the World. He traveled extensively and kept in touch with Scouting around the world.

Eventually, Baden-Powell's health began to fail. He set up a winter home at Nyeri, Kenya, in 1938, where he spent his remaining years until his death in 1941. Scouts of different races carried him to his final resting place in the small cemetery at Nyeri. His grave is marked with a simple headstone that bears his name and the Scout sign for "I have gone home." Today, in Westminster Abbey, a tablet records his name, along with the names of some of the greatest Britons of all time.

After Baden-Powell's death, a letter was found in his desk that he had written to all Scouts. It included this passage: "Try and leave this world a little better than you found it." These words are a fitting epitaph, for as he won the respect of the great by his strength, he won the hearts of youth by his example.

One Oath, One Law


In the BSA’s earliest days, there was just one Scouting program— Boy Scouting—and it used the Scout Oath and Scout Law. Over the years, new programs have come along and with them new codes: the Cub Scout Promise, the Law of the Pack, the Venturing Oath, and the Venturing Code.

Those other programs aren’t going away, but their codes of conduct soon will. Venturing adopted the Scout Oath and Scout Law in May 2014, followed by Cub Scouting at the start of the 2015-2016 program year. The change emphasizes the unity of the Scouting movement and make it a bit easier for Cub Scouting and Venturing to live out Scouting’s mission and vision statements, both of which refer to the Scout Oath and Scout Law.

On My Honor

The Scout Oath
On my honor I will do my best
To do my duty to God and my country
and to obey the Scout Law;
To help other people at all times;
To keep myself physically strong,
mentally awake, and morally straight.

 

Note that the Boy Scout Oath has traditionally been considered to have three promises. Those three promises are delineated by the semicolons in the Oath, which divide it into three clauses. The three promises of the Scout Oath are, therefore: 

Duty to God and country, Duty to other people, and Duty to self

DUTY TO GOD AND COUNTRY: Your family and religious leaders teach you to know and serve God. By following these teachings, you do your duty to God.  Men and women of the past worked to make America great, and many gave their lives for their country. By being a good family member and a good citizen, by working for your country's good and obeying its laws, you do your duty to your country. Obeying the Scout Law means living by its 12 points.

DUTY TO OTHER PEOPLE: Many people need help. A cheery smile and a helping hand make life easier for others. By doing a Good Turn daily and helping when you're needed, you prove yourself a Scout and do your part to make this a better world.

DUTY TO SELF: Keeping yourself physically strong means taking care of your body. Eat the right foods and build your strength. Staying mentally awake means learn all you can, be curious, and ask questions. Being morally straight means to live your life with honesty, to be clean in your speech and actions, and to be a person of strong character.

The Scout Law
A Scout is:
trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent.

 

 

 

 
Trustworthy: A Scout tells the truth. He is honest, and he keeps his promises. People can depend on him.
 
Loyal: A Scout is true to his family, friends, Scout leaders, school, and nation.

Helpful: A Scout cares about other people. He willingly volunteers to help others without expecting payment or reward.

Friendly: A Scout is a friend to all. He is a brother to other Scouts. He offers his friendship to people of all races and nations, and respects them even if their beliefs and customs are different from his own.

Courteous: A Scout is polite to everyone regardless of age or position. He knows that using good manners makes it easier for people to get along.

Kind: A Scout knows there is strength in being gentle. He treats others as he wants to be treated. Without good reason, he does not harm or kill any living thing.

Obedient: A Scout follows the rules of his family, school, and troop. He obeys the laws of his community and country. If he thinks these rules and laws are unfair, he tries to have them changed in an orderly manner rather than disobeying them.

Cheerful: A Scout looks for the bright side of life. He cheerfully does tasks that come his way. He tries to make others happy.

Thrifty: A Scout works to pay his own way and to help others. He saves for the future. He protects and conserves natural resources. He carefully uses time and property.

 

Brave: A Scout can face danger although he is afraid. He has the courage to stand for what he thinks is right even if others laugh at him or threaten him.
Clean: A Scout keeps his body and mind fit and clean. He chooses the company of those who live by high standards. He helps keep his home and community clean.

Reverent:
A Scout is reverent toward God. He is faithful in his religious duties.  He respects the beliefs of others.
 

     

    From a Biblical Perspective:

    A Scout is TRUSTWORTHY.

    "The person who is dishonest shall not live in My house; the person who is untruthful shall not stand before My eyes." (Psalms 101:7)

    A Scout is LOYAL.

    "And Ruth said: "Do not beg me to leave you or to return from following after you, for where you go, I will go; and where you stay, I will stay. " (Ruth 1:16)

    A Scout is HELPFUL.

    "You shall love your neighbor as yourself" (Leviticus 19:18)

    A Scout is FRIENDLY.

    "Can two walk together unless they agree?" (Amos 3:3)
     
    A Scout is COURTEOUS.
    "Honor your father and your mother." (Exodus 20:12)

    A Scout is KIND.

            "Withhold not good from the person to whom it is due, when it is in the power of your hand to do it." (Proverbs 3:27)

    A Scout is OBEDIENT.
     
    "Apply your heart to instruction, and your ears to the words of knowledge." (Proverbs 23:12)

    A Scout is CHEERFUL.

    "A glad heart is good medicine." (Proverbs 17:22)

    A Scout is THRIFTY.
    "Precious treasure remains in a wise person's dwelling, but a foolish person uses it up." (Proverbs 21:20)

    A Scout is BRAVE.

    "Be strong and of good courage." (I Chronicles 28:20)

    A Scout is CLEAN.

    "Who shall ascend the mountain of the Lord? And who shall stand in His holy place? The person who has clean hands and a pure heart." (Psalms 24:3-4)

    A Scout is REVERENT.

    "It has been told to you what is good, and what the Lord requires of you; Only to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God." (Micah 6:8)




     

    Scout Motto 

      


    Scout's Outdoor Code 

     
    • Be clean in my outdoor manners.
      I will treat the outdoors as a heritage.
      I will take care of it for myself and others
      I will keep my trash and garbage out of lakes, streams, fields, woods, and roadways.
    • Be careful with fire.
      I will prevent wildfire.
      I will build my fires only where they are appropriate.
      When I have finished using a fire, I will make sure it is cold out.
      I will leave a clean fire ring, or remove all evidence of my fire.
    • Be considerate in the outdoors.
      I will treat public and private property with respect.
      I will use low-impact methods of hiking and camping.
    • Be conservation minded
      I will learn how to practice good conservation of soil, waters, forests, minerals, grasslands, wildlife, and energy.
      I will urge others to do the same.

     

    Eagle Scout Information

    FAMOUS EAGLE SCOUTS

    (Note: In the lists below, we've omitted "Former" from all titles.)

    • Gary L. Ackerman - U.S. Representative from NY
    • Bill Alexander - U.S. Representative from Arkansas
    • Lamar Alexander - Lawyer, Governor of Tennessee, Secretary of Education, presidential candidate
    • Neil Armstrong - astronaut, first man on moon, from Wapakoneta, OH
    • Willie Banks - Olympic & world record holding track star
    • Albert Belle - baseball player
    • Charles E. Bennett - U.S. Representative from Florida
    • William Bennett - Secretary of Education
    • Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. - Treasury Secretary & U.S. Representative from Texas
    • Michael Bloomberg - Mayor of New York City, founder of Bloomberg News
    • Bill Bradley - Pro basketball star and U.S. Senator from NJ
    • James Brady - Press Secretary to President Reagan
    • Stephen Breyer - US Supreme Court Justice
    • Milton A. Caniff - Comic strip artist "Steve Canyon"
    • Rear Admiral Jay M. Cohen, USN - Undersecretary of Homeland Security
    • Barber B. Conable - President, World Bank
    • John W. Creighton, Jr. - President & CEO of Weyerhaeuser Company
    • William E. Dannemeyer - U.S. Representative from Cal.
    • William Devries - M.D., transplanted first artificial heart
    • Michael Dukakis - Governor of Massachusetts, presidential candidate
    • LTC Aquilla James Dyess - WWII Marine, Medal of Honor recipient (deceased)
    • Arthur Eldred - First Eagle Scout
    • Daniel J. Evans - Senator and Governor of Washington
    • David Farabee - Texas State Representative
    • Robert Edward Femoyer - WWII Army Air Force Navigator, Medal of Honor recipient (deceased)
    • Rear Admiral Eugene B. Fluckey - WWII Submarine Commander, Medal of Honor recipient (deceased)
    • Thomas Foley - Speaker of the House and U.S. Representative from Washington
    • Gerald Ford - U.S. President (1st Eagle to be President) (deceased)
    • Steven Fossett - Flew solo nonstop around the world in a hot air balloon and in an ultralight airplane, won the Chicago to Mackinaw boat races, competed in the Iditarod dog race, and iron man triathlons (deceased)
    • Murphy J. (Mike) Foster - Governor of Louisiana
    • Robert M. Gates - Director of Central Intelligence (CIA) and Secretary. of Defense
    • Richard A. Gephardt - U.S. Representative from Missouri, Minority Leader
    • Steve Holcomb - Olympic Gold Medal winner -4 man Bobsled
    • Admiral Jay Johnson, USN - Chief of Naval Operations
    • Michael Kahn - stage director, Oscar winning film editor
    • William Henry Keeler - Roman Catholic Cardinal and Archbishop of Baltimore
    • Larry Kellner, CEO - Continental Airlines
    • Dr. Alfred Kinsey - insect biologist, human behavior researcher
    • John Koncak - basketball player
    • Sheldon Leonard - actor, director, producer, 3 time Emmy award winner
    • Steven W. Lindsey - Astronaut
    • Gary Locke, Governor of the State of Washington
    • James Lovell - Astronaut
    • Richard Lugar - Senator from Indiana (presidential candidate 1996)
    • J. Willard Marriott, Jr. - President, Marriott Corp.
    • William McCool Astronaut
    • W. Walter Menninger - Physician, civil servant
    • Jim Mora - NFL football coach
    • Oswald "Ozzie" Nelson - actor
    • Sam Nunn - U.S. Senator from Georgia
    • Ellison Onizuka - Astronaut (deceased)
    • Steve Oswald - Astronaut, Navy Rear Admiral
    • Mitchell Paige - USMC, Medal of Honor. (deceased)
    • Francis J. Parater - nominated for Sainthood by Diocese of Richmond, VA. died at age 22 in 1920 in Rome, while at seminary.
    • H. Ross Perot - Self-made billionaire and presidential candidate
    • Rick Perry - Governor, State of Texas
    • J. J. Pickle - U.S. Representative from Texas, proudly displayed his Eagle plaque inside his office (deceased)
    • Samuel R. Pierce - Former Sec. Housing & Urban Development
    • Frederick Reines - Nobel Prize winner in Physics
    • Gary Rogers - Chairman and CEO of Dreyer's Ice Cream
    • Jim Rogers - CEO of Kampgrounds of America (KOA)
    • Mike Rowe - Star of "Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe" on the Discovery Channel
    • Donald Rumsfeld - Secretary of Defense
    • Harrison Salisbury - Pulitzer Prize winning author
    • James Sanderson - Vice Admiral, US Navy (Ret), Deputy Chief US Atlantic Fleet
    • Dr. Benjamin Lewis Salomon - WWII Army front line surgeon & Medal of Honor recipient (deceased)
    • Jeff Sessions - Senator from Alabama
    • William Sessions - FBI director
    • Sam Skinner - US Secretary of Energy, CEO of Commonwealth Edison
    • Steven Spielberg - Movie producer, from Scottsdale, AZ, made a movie of his troop while getting Photography MB. Helped to design requirements for the cinematography MB.
    • Wallace Stegner - Writer and college professor, won Pulitzer Prize in 1972 for "Angle of Repose"
    • Percy Sutton - Attorney, Chairman of the Board of City Broadcasting Corp.
    • John Tesh - TV celebrity and pianist
    • Meldrim Thomson, Jr. - 3 term governor of New Hampshire (deceased)
    • Leo K. Thorsness - Vietnam War Air Force Colonel, POW, & Medal of Honor recipient
    • Sam Walton - Founder, Wal-Mart (deceased)
    • Togo West - Secretary of the Army and Secretary of Veterans Affairs
    • Jay Zeamer Jr. - WWII Army Air Force pilot & Medal of Honor recipient (deceased)
    • Elmo R. Zumwalt, Jr. - Admiral, Chief of Naval Operations

    Eagle Facts

    Just over 2 million boys have reached Eagle in 100 years (15,000 a year, roughly). Currently, around 4 of every 100 boys that joins Scouts make Eagle--that's less than 1% of the male population.