|

| |
The Beginning of Scouting
Scouting, as known to millions of youth and adults, evolved during the early
1900s through the efforts of several men dedicated to bettering youth. These
pioneers of the program conceived outdoor activities that developed skills in
young boys and gave them a sense of enjoyment, fellowship, and a code of conduct
for everyday living.
In this country and abroad at the turn of the century, it was thought that
children needed certain kinds of education that the schools couldn't or didn't
provide. This led to the formation of a variety of youth groups, many with the
word "Scout" in their names. For example, Ernest Thompson Seton, an American
naturalist, artist, writer, and lecturer, originated a group called the
Woodcraft Indians and in 1902 wrote a guidebook for boys in his organization
called the Birch Bark Roll. Meanwhile in Britain, Robert Baden-Powell,
after returning to his country a hero following military service in Africa,
found boys reading the manual he had written for his regiment on stalking and
survival in the wild. Gathering ideas from Seton, America's Daniel Carter Beard,
and other Scoutcraft experts, Baden-Powell rewrote his manual as a nonmilitary
skill book, which he titled Scouting for Boys. The book rapidly gained a
wide readership in England and soon became popular in the United States. In
1907, when Baden-Powell held the first campout for Scouts on Brownsea Island off
the coast of England, troops were spontaneously springing up in America.
William D. Boyce, a Chicago publisher, incorporated the Boy Scouts of America
in 1910 after meeting with Baden-Powell. (Boyce was inspired to meet with the
British founder by an unknown Scout who led him out of a dense London fog and
refused to take a tip for doing a Good Turn.) Immediately after its
incorporation, the BSA was assisted by officers of the YMCA in organizing a task
force to help community organizations start and maintain a high-quality Scouting
program. Those efforts climaxed in the organization of the nation's first Scout
camp at Lake George, New York, directed by Ernest Thompson Seton. Beard, who had
established another youth group, the Sons of Daniel Boone (which he later merged
with the BSA), provided assistance. Also on hand for this historic event was
James E. West, a lawyer and an advocate of children's rights, who later would
become the first professional Chief Scout Executive of the Boy Scouts of
America. Seton became the first volunteer national Chief Scout, and Beard, the
first national Scout commissioner.
Click
here to see a YouTube video entitled: THE BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA presents THE
SCOUT MASTER 1931.
|