Scouting in New York

Scouting in New York
Newton Hall, Camp Buckskin
Camp Andree Clark
Camp Andree Clark
Girl Scouts 38th Anniversary on Howdy Doody
Fifth Avenue, New York - 1917
Fifth Avenue, New York - 1917

Scouting in New York has a long history, from the 1910s to the present day, serving thousands of youth in programs that suit the environment in which they live. In fact, the first National Boy Scouts of America Headquarters was in New York City, and the Girl Scouts of the USA National Headquarters is located at 420 5th Avenue, New York, New York.

Early history (1910-1950)

On September 10, 1910, S. F. Lester of Troy, New York, became the very first person to hold the Scouting leadership position of Scoutmaster (approved by the BSA). He received his certification from the BSA headquarters in New York City. In 1910 he led a group of 30 scouts at Camp Ilium, in Pownal, Vermont. Camp Ilium was the starting point of the Boy Scout Movement for Troy, and Pownal. Pownal is only 35 miles (56 km) away from Troy.[1]

Following the lead of the State of Michigan, the State of New York formed its own Forest Scouts. This group was formed in response to a number of late 19th century and early 20th century forest fires and were effectively "auxiliary fire wardens".[2][3]

The 1924 National Order of the Arrow Lodge Meeting was held at Tuxedo Park, New York, and the 1929 National Lodge Meeting was held at Lake Kanawauke, New York.

Recent history (1950-present)

In the 1970s and again in the 1990s, upstate New York went through a huge consolidation of small, historic councils.[4]

In recent years, New York has also been home to smaller, independent scouting organizations.[5]

Scouting in New York today

Boy Scouts

There are seventeen Boy Scouts of America local councils in New York..

Allegheny Highlands Council

Allegheny Highlands Council (#382)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Falconer, New York
Website
alleghenyhighlands.org

The Allegheny Highlands Council serves Scouts in Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, and Allegany counties in New York and McKean and Potter counties in Pennsylvania.[6]

Organization

The council is divided into 2 districts:

Camps

It has two camps: Camp Merz and Elk Lick Scout Reserve. Elk Lick is tucked into the heart of the Allegheny Mountains in Smethport, Pa, and a traditional summer camp in a beautiful setting. Camp Merz is located on Lake Chautauqua, just up the road from the Chautauqua Institution in western NY.

Order of the Arrow

Baden-Powell Council

Baden-Powell Council (#368)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Binghamton, NY
Website
bpcouncil.org

Baden-Powell Council was formed in 1998 by the merger of the former Baden-Powell Council (headquartered in Dryden, NY) and Susquenango Council (headquartered in Binghamton, New York). The council's new headquarters are in Binghamton. The council covers five counties in New York State—Broome, Chenango, Cortland, Tioga and Tompkins—as well as Susquehanna County in Pennsylvania.[7]

Organization

As of late-2012, the Council has four districts:

Camps

The Baden-Powell Council operates two Scout Camps:

Camp Barton is a Boy Scouts of America camp located on 300 acres (1.2 km2) on Frontenac Point on the west shore of Cayuga Lake in New York State's Finger Lakes. It is approximately nine miles north of Ithaca.[9]

Camp Barton has nine summer camping sites with 2- and 4-man platform tents, as well as winter lean-tos in one of the two gorges which surround the camp.[10] The camp facilities include many water-based activities on the camp's half-mile of waterfront, including rowing, motorboating, sailing, waterskiing, jetskiing and swimming, as well as handicrafts, nature, rifle and archery ranges, and scoutcraft areas. Camp Barton also has a special Intro to SCUBA course.[11]

The council makes the camp's buildings and cabins available for off-season use by Scouting and other youth organizations.[12]

Camp Tuscarora is a Boy Scouts of America camp located on 1100 acres (4.5 km²) around Summit Lake in New York State's Southern Tier.[13]

The camp has twelve summer camping sites with 2-man platform tents.[13] It also has five winter units with a center lodge equipped with wood stoves, refrigerators and electricity and four 8-man lean-tos. Camp Tuscarora also offers a renovated Nature lodge, dining hall, a nationally known Handicraft program, and a 40-foot (12 m) climbing wall.[14]

Order of the Arrow

The corresponding Order of the Arrow Lodge is Otahnagon Lodge 172, a nationally recognized lodge.

Connecticut Rivers Council

The Connecticut Rivers Council serves the majority of the State of Connecticut in addition to Fisher's Island in New York.

Five Rivers Council

Five Rivers Council (#375)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Horseheads, NY
Website
fiverivers.org

Five Rivers Council serves Scouts in the Southern tier of New York and the Northern tier of Pennsylvania.

Organization

The council is divided into four districts:[15]

Camps

It operates two camps: Camp Brulé, in central Pennsylvania, and Camp Gorton on Waneta Lake in New York.

Camp Gorton

Camp Gorton located on Waneta Lake in the middle of the Finger Lakes provides over 350 acres of land with some of the best facilities in Upstate New York for Boy Scout camps. In 2014 Camp Gorton is celebrating the 92nd year of existence and 90th anniversary of being a scout camp on the east side of Waneta Lake.

Camp Gorton provides a program that is well-suited for younger scouts and is known for having an excellent waterfront and shooting sports programs. At the waterfront they offer facilities for fulfilling the Water Sports merit badge requirements as well as those for the Motorboating merit badge for no additional fee. Their Shooting Sports ranges have 16 slots for fulfilling the Rifle merit badge requirements and has plenty of cover for Scouts, Leaders, and Parents to come and observe.

Camp Brulé

Camp Brulé (pronounced "Brul-a"), named after Étienne Brûlé, is in Sullivan County, Pennsylvania. It was founded by the General Sullivan Council with headquarters in Athens and jurisdiction over Bradford, Tioga and Sullivan Counties.

The camp covers the forty two acres of Elk Lake and 200 acres (0.8 km2) of forest land bordering it. Pancost Hall and Crandall Hall are memorials to Alfred H. Pancost, Chief Scout Executive and founder, and to Harry H. Crandall, first president of the Council.

On the parade ground a native boulder bears a bronze plaque in memory of Eagle Scout twin brothers from Troop 2, Towanda, Pennsylvania, Army Air Corp Lieutenants John R. and William G. Winter. Born August 11, 1925, they were killed in action in World War II on August 11, 1945. The plaque was erected by employees of the Patterson Screen Company.[16]

Greater New York Councils

Greater New York Councils (#640)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Location

350 Fifth Avenue, Suite 7820

New York, NY 10118
Country United States
Council President Ray Quartararo
Council Commissioner Thomas S. Bain
Scout Executive Ethan V. Draddy
Website
bsa-gnyc.org

The Greater New York Councils, Boy Scouts of America serves the Scouting families of the five boroughs of New York City.

Greater Niagara Frontier Council

Greater Niagara Frontier Council (#380)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Buffalo, NY
Website
wnyscouting.org

Greater Niagara Frontier Council serves the territory of Erie and western Niagara Counties, with its headquarters in Buffalo.

Organization

The council is organized into four districts:

Camps

The Boy Scout summer camp is Schoellkopf Scout Reservation, formed in 1938, located in Cowlesville, NY, and donated by the Schoellkopf family. It normally runs 6 weeks of traditional summer camp sessions each year. The summer camp offers shooting sports, a COPE high ropes course program, an older boy Kodiak adventure/leadership program that includes things like SCUBA diving and horseback riding, and a variety of program areas focusing on summer camp merit badges.

The Cub Scout camp is Camp Scouthaven, located in Freedom, NY (just outside Arcade).

Longhouse Council

Longhouse Council (#373)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Syracuse, NY
Country United States
Founded 2001
Website
cnyscouts.org

Longhouse Council was formed in 2010 as a merger of Hiawatha Seaway Council and Cayuga County Council. The Hiawatha Seaway Council was formed in 1999 as a result of the merger of the Hiawatha Council and Seaway Valley Council.[18] The council is headquartered in Syracuse, NY. The council currently owns 2 camps, including Sabattis Scouting Reservation and Camp Woodland.[19] The council covers six counties in New York State — Cayuga, Jefferson, Lewis, Oswego, Onondaga, and St. Lawrence.[20]

Organization

The council is divided into seven districts:[20]

As of 30 June 2009, Longhouse Council acquired a seventh district: Cayuga County.[21] This was previously Cayuga County Council, which lost its charter.[22][23]

Order of the Arrow

Lowanne Nimat Lodge 219, formed January 1, 2010 from Kayanernh Kowa and Tahgajute lodges.[24]

The World Brotherhood Camporee is a weekend-long camping trip that Boy Scouts from Canada and the U.S. participate in. The camporee is an annual event and takes place either in the Longhouse Council, New York or in the Loyalist Area of the Voyageur Council, Ontario, Canada.

The main events include Council Strip trading and a dance party.[25]

Hudson Valley Council

Hudson Valley Council (#374)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Newburgh, NY
Country United States
Founded 2001
Website
hudsonvalleyscouting.org

The Hudson Valley Council is headquartered in Newburgh, New York, and also serves Scouts in Pennsylvania. The grave of Daniel Carter Beard lies within the Hudson Valley Council, where an annual service is held.

Organization

Its districts are: Rockland, Heritage, Delaware River, and Dutchess.

Dutchess contingent at the 1977 national Scout jamboree, held at Moraine State Park, Pennsylvania
Camps

The Hudson Valley Council operates two year-round use properties - Camp Bullowa in Stony Point, NY and Camp Nooteeming in Salt Point, NY.

Order of the Arrow Lodge

Iroquois Trail Council

Iroquois Trail Council (#376)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Batavia, NY
Country United States
Founded 2001
Website
itcbsa.org

Iroquois Trail Council, with its headquarters in Batavia, New York, serves Scouts in western New York. It was created in 1994 from a merger of two councils: Genesee (Genesee, Livingston, and Wyoming Counties) and Lewiston Trail (eastern Niagara and Orleans Counties).

Troop 1 was first formed in 1912, first chartered in 1914. When it was disbanded in late 1994 troop 1 had 80+ years continuous charter with the BSA.

Organization

As of 2007, the council is divided into three districts:[27]

When the two councils merged, it originally had four districts.

Camps

It has two camps: Camp Dittmer (Boy Scout) and Camp Sam Wood (Cub Scout). Sam Wood was the first Eagle Scout in Genesee County. Sam Wood was a member of Troop 1 St. James Church, Batavia.

Order of the Arrow

Otschodela Council

Otschodela Council #393
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Oneonta, NY
Country United States
Founded 2001
Website
otschodela.org

The Otschodela Council of the Boy Scouts of America serves the needs of Delaware, Otsego and Schoharie Counties in upstate New York.

Otschodela Council was formed in 1924 as the Otsego-Schoharie Council; the third county added in 1926 and the name changed to Otschodela (OTsego-SCHOharie-DELAware). Otschodela Council, headquartered in Oneonta, NY, has retained its name and three-county borders ever since.

Organization

It is divided into two districts:

Order of the Arrow
Henderson Scout Reservation

Within its programs the council provides opportunities for scouts to participate in summer camp at Boy Scout Camp Henderson, camporees, day camps and more. It provides valuable leader training at all levels of scouting.

Henderson Scout Reservation is made up of over 600 acres (2 km2) of woodlands and is home to a 70-acre (0 km2) lake that are both managed and maintained for the best possible Scouting experience. It has twelve campsites located in close proximity to the program facilities. It runs six weeks of Boy Scout Summer Camp Programs and Webelos Summer Camps. The camp also provides year-round camping at any of its lodging facilities, campsites or lean-tos.[29]

Located 20 minutes away from the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown and the Soccer Hall of Fame in Oneonta. The Otschodela Council with the National Baseball Hall of Fame has developed a Boy Scout national patch for the Baseball Hall of Fame Scavenger Hunt.[30]

Revolutionary Trails Council

Revolutionary Trails Council (#400)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Utica, NY
Country United States
Founded 2001
Website
rtcbsa.org

Revolutionary Trails Council serves a portion of central New York. In 2001, the Land of the Oneidas Council and General Herkimer Council merged forming the current council. The council provides Scouting to Herkimer, Oneida and Madison Counties as well as part of Hamilton, Otsego and Lewis Counties.

Rip Van Winkle Council

Rip Van Winkle Council (#405)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Kingston, NY
Country United States
Founded 2001
Website
rvwbsa.org

Rip Van Winkle Council serves the youth of Ulster and Greene counties of New York, and headquartered in Kingston. The Rip Van Winkle Council has the distinction of having 6 of the first 21 Eagle Scouts from the Class of 1912, the first class of Eagle Scouts.

Organization

The council is divided into two districts:

Camps

The council's camp, located in East Jewett, NY, is Camp Tri-Mount.[31]

Order of the Arrow

Seneca Waterways Council

Seneca Waterways Council (#397)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Rochester, New York
Country United States
Founded 2009
Website
senecawaterways.org

Seneca Waterways Council (SWC) serves youth in the Counties of Ontario, Wayne, Seneca, Yates, and Monroe and the city of Rochester, New York.

Suffolk County Council

Suffolk County Council (#404)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Medford, NY
Location Suffolk County, NY
Country United States
Founded April 6, 1919
President Mark Businski
Council Commissioner Dot Young
Scout Executive Dirk Smith
Website
sccbsa.org

Suffolk County Council serves scouts in Suffolk County, on Long Island, New York. Baiting Hollow Scout Camp is the council camp.

Theodore Roosevelt Council

Theodore Roosevelt Council (#386)

Colonel Theodore Roosevelt Has His Own Preparedness Parade at Oyster Bay
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Massapequa, NY
Country United States
Website
trcbsa.org

Theodore Roosevelt Council supports Scouting in Nassau County, New York.

Twin Rivers Council

Twin Rivers Council (#364)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Headquarters Albany, New York
Country United States
Website
http://trcscouting.org/

Twin Rivers Council is based in Albany, New York. It serves a large geographic area that encompasses 13 counties of Northeastern New York. On February 14, 2006 the Adirondack Council and the Twin Rivers Council merged to form the Twin Rivers Council #364. This merger was the result of recommendations made by both of the respective Council Executive Boards with National that neither council could continue to exist financially and both would need to merge to become a new solvent council. The new council has within its boundaries much of the Adirondack Park, one of the Northeast's wildest places and a haven for Scouting activities.

Organization

It currently encompasses seven districts:

Camps
Rotary Scout Reservation
Rotary Scout Reservation
Location Poestenkill, NY
Founded 1922
Website
http://www.rsrbsa.org/

Rotary Scout Reservation is a 1,300-acre (5 km2) camp of the Twin Rivers Council, located in Poestenkill, New York. The original part of the camp was donated by the Troy Rotary Club in 1922. Summer camp program areas include the Trail to First Class Program, where young Scouts can work on requirements needed to earn Tenderfoot, Second Class and First Class ranks. Following the introduction of the Kayaking and Traffic Safety merit badges for the 2012 summer camp season, RSR offers 43 merit badges in 10 program areas. In addition to the merit badge options, RSR offers an open schedule which allows Scouts to plan their day with a variety of outdoor experiences. The camp also offers several additional program areas designed to appeal to older Scouts, which include COPE, Mountain Biking, and Chillicothe.

RSR's totem is the Thunderbird.

The Chillicothe program at RSR offers Scouts and Leaders a look at American pioneer life in the 19th century. Scouts are encouraged to try their hand at activities such as candle making, flint and steel fire starting, blacksmithing, woodsman tools, tin-smithing, blacksmithing and more. Chillicothe is a program unique to RSR, and it is an often underutilized program. It was designed to encourage the return of older Scouts who had earned most of the merit badges offered by the camp.

In 2012, RSR introduced Venturing Week, a week of resident camp for youth in the Venturing Program. In addition to various open programming opportunities, offerings included a full-week half-day COPE course, American Red Cross Wilderness First Aid, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Hunter Education course, and more.

Camp Wakpominee
Camp Wakpominee
Location Fort Ann, NY

Camp Wakpominee is a 1,200-acre camp located in Fort Ann, NY. It is completely within the boundaries of the Adirondack Park, providing a base for Council trekking programs. The camp contains Sly Pond, a 42-acre lake.

Woodworth Lake Scout Reservation

Woodworth Lake Scout Reservation, located in Gloversville, New York.The 1500 acre camp began operation in 1949. Situated in the Adirondacks, Woodworth Lake is an excellent starting point for a hike into the Adirondacks. There are no resident summer programs run out of this camp, however it is open for weekend camping trips as well as a summer Cub Scout day camp.

As of August 10, 2013, the camp will no longer be open to scouts as it is being sold to a private investor.[33]

Camp Boyhaven
Camp Boyhaven
Location Middle Grove, NY
Founded 1924

Camp Boyhaven is a 300 acre camp located in Middle Grove, New York. It was founded as a Boy Scout camp in 1924 with a purchase of approximately 20 acres from the Frink family for Schenectady Council. Over the years, the camp grew to encompass most of the old Frink family farm. With the merger of Schenectady Council with Twin Rivers Council in 1991, it was converted to a Cub Scout and Webelos long term camp.

The totem of the camp is the "Toonerville Trolley," based off the trolley line that ran across the creek from the camp.[34]

Each summer, the camp runs Cub Scout and Webelos resident and day camps. The camp program and facilities are specially designed for Cub Scouts, Webelos scouts, and their families. Lean-to cabins and indoor plumbing make the transition to overnight camping easier for Cub Scouts and Webelos Scouts. An archery range, BB gun range, vertical climbing wall, water slide, and movie night are all provided to appeal to younger Scouts who are spending their first nights away from home.

Camp Bedford

Camp Bedford, is located at 10424 State Rt. 30, Malone, NY (near the Meacham Lake NYS DEC Campground, north of Paul Smiths, and south of Malone, NY). The camp encompasses 150 acres (0.61 km2), 2 large ponds for boating and fishing, and over 3,500 acres (14 km2) of State Wild Forests border the camp. Charles E. Bedford donated 3,650 acres (14.8 km2) to the Adirondack Council in 1943 to establish the camp, making it at the time the largest donation of land to any council in the USA.

Order of the Arrow

The Order of the Arrow Lodge for Twin Rivers Council is Kittan Lodge 364.[35]

Westchester-Putnam Council

Westchester-Putnam Council (#388)
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Country United States
Founded 1973

Westchester-Putnam Council serves Scouts in southeastern New York State.

Girl Scouts

Girl Scouting in New York

Map of Girl Scout Councils in New York State

New York state is served by 12 (soon to be 8) Girl Scouts councils. In addition the Edith Macy Conference Center belonging to the national organization is in Briarcliff Manor and the national headquarters is in New York City.

National Headquarters

The national headquarters has been in various places in New York City since 1916 when it moved there from Washington, D.C.. It has been at 420 Fifth Avenue since 1992. Small groups can visit with prior reservations and visiting girls may be able to take part in a focus group meeting.[36]

Edith Macy Conference Center

Edith Macy Conference Center is a national conference and training facility of the Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) It is located in Briarcliff Manor. The site has had four names: Camp Edith Macy (C.E.M.) - University In The Woods, Edith Macy Training School, Edith Macy Girl Scout National Center and since 1982, Edith Macy Conference Center. However, it is often simply referred to as Macy. The John J. Creedon Education Center and Camp Andree Clark are part of the complex. Macy hosted the Girl Guides and Girl Scouts Fourth International Conference in 1926. Camp Andree Clark hosted the GSUSA's Silver Jubilee Camp in 1937.

Girl Scouts of Connecticut

Fishers Island in Suffolk County, New York is served by the Girl Scouts of Connecticut due to the close ties between the island and Connecticut.

Girl Scout Council of Greater New York

Girl Scout Council of Greater New York
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters New York, NY
Country United States
Founded 2005
Website
girlscoutsnyc.org

Girl Scouts of Greater New York serves some 25,000 girls and has over 8,700 volunteers in New York City.

The council camp is 425-acre (1.72 km2) Camp Henry Kaufman in the Hudson Valley.

Girl Scouts Heart of the Hudson

Girl Scouts Heart of the Hudson
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters Pleasantville, New York
Country United States
Founded 2005
Website
girlscoutshh.org

Girl Scouts Heart of the Hudson serves over 34,000 girls in Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan, Ulster and Westchester counties.

Camps

Girl Scouts of Nassau County

Girl Scouts of Nassau County
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters Garden City, New York
Country United States
Founded 1917
Website
gsnc.org

Girl Scouting In Nassau County started in 1917.It is chartered by GSUSA to develop, maintain and administer Girl Scouting in Nassau County.

Camps

Camp Blue Bay in East Hampton, New York is the council camp. Camp Tekakwitha was sold in June 2007 to Southampton, NY which will retain it as open space.

Girl Scouts of Northeastern New York

Girl Scouts of Northeastern New York
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters Albany, New York
Country United States
Founded 2007
Website
gsneny.org

Girl Scouts of Northeastern New York was created in June 2007 from the union of four Girl Scout Councils (Hudson Valley, Mohawk Pathways, Adirondack and North Country) and now serves Albany, Clinton, Columbia, Greene, Essex, Franklin, Fulton, Montgomery, Hamilton, Rensselaer, Saratoga, Schenectady, Schoharie, Warren and Washington Counties and a portion of St. Lawrence County.

GSNENY serves over 14,500 girls and has over 6,500 adults and volunteers.

Camps

Girl Scouts of NYPENN Pathways

Girl Scouts of NYPENN Pathways
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters Garden City, New York
Country United States
Founded 2009
Website
gsnypenn.org

NYPenn Pathways was formed in June 2009, from five legacy councils - Seven Lakes Council, Central New York Council, Foothills Council, Indian Hills Council and Thousand Islands Council. NYPenn Pathways serves girls in 24 New York State counties and 2 Pennsylvania counties with a total girl registration totaling about 27,000.

Organization
Camps
NYPenn Pathway's Original Five Councils

Girl Scouts of Suffolk County

Girl Scouts of Suffolk County
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters Commack, New York
Country United States
Founded 1968
Website
gssc.us

Girl Scouts of Suffolk County serves more than 43,000 girls and has more than 9,000 adult volunteers. The first troop in the county was started in 1915.

Camps

Girl Scouts of Western New York

Girl Scouts of Western New York
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters Buffalo, New York
Country United States
Founded 2008
Website
gswny.org

Girl Scouts of Western New York was created on July 1, 2008, from four legacy councils: Girl Scout Council of Buffalo & Erie County, Inc., Girl Scouts of Genesee Valley, Inc., Girl Scouts of Niagara County, Inc., and Girl Scouts of Southwestern New York, Inc. The council serves some 25,000 girls within Erie, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Genesee, Livingston, Niagara, Orleans, Monroe, and Wyoming counties.

Camps

Baden-Powell Service Association

New York is home to two chartered groups of the Baden-Powell Service Association. The BPSA is an inclusive, "back to basics" organization that welcomes boys and girls from 5 years of age through adulthood.

91st Sojourners

91st Sojourners
Location Kingston, New York
Country United States
Founded 2013
Website
https://sites.google.com/site/91stsojournersbpsa/

The 91st Sojourners group is based in greater Kingston, NY, with a mission to create a coed, inclusive and traditional scouting organization serving the Mid-Hudson Valley. The group was named after 19th-century abolitionist (and Ulster County native) Sojourner Truth.[37]

5th Brooklyn

5th Brooklyn
Location Brooklyn, New York
Country United States
Founded 2013
Website
http://www.5thbrooklynscouts.org/

The 5th Brooklyn Scouts were formed in 2013 by Todd Schweikert, a former Eagle Scout who was looking for a more inclusive experience for his son.[38]


International Scouting units in New York

In addition, there are Armenian Scouts and Estonian Scouts in Exile in New York City, and Külföldi Magyar Cserkészszövetség Hungarian Scouting maintains two troops in New York City and one in Buffalo. Also, there are large contingents of active Plast Ukrainian Scouts in New York City.

West Point Camporee

48th annual West Point Camporee

The West Point Camporee annual Invitational event, started in 1963, run by a Cadet Officer, held around the first week of May since 2001 on the grounds of Lake Frederick. Cadets are allowed to invite their home Scouting Units (Boy Scout and Girl Scout). Managed by the Scoutmasters' Council.

Scouting museums in New York

See also

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scouting in New York.

References

  1. Gilbert, Kevin. "This Day in 1910 in The Record: Aug. 10, 1910". troyrecord.com. Retrieved October 4, 2013.
  2. Daniel N. Jabe. (1998) The Sons of the Nation: The Popular Appeal of the Boy Scouts of America, 1910-1919. VirtualScoutMuseum.com.
  3. Other Boy Scout Organizations -- THE FOREST SCOUTS. VirtualScoutMuseum.com.
  4. Hook, James; Franck, Dave; Austin, Steve (1982). An Aid to Collecting Selected Council Shoulder Patches with Valuation.
  5. Wollan, Malia. "Earning Merit Badges and Learning Knots Under New Flags". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  6. "Allegheny Highlands Council About Page". Allegheny Highlands Council Website. Allegheny Highlands Council. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  7. "Baden-Powell Council History". Baden-Powell Council Website. Baden-Powell Council. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  8. "Districts". Baden-Powell Council Website. Baden-Powell Council. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  9. "Camp Barton". Bpcouncil.org. Retrieved October 4, 2013.
  10. "Camp Barton". Camp Barton. Baden-Powell Council. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
  11. "Camp Barton Program". Camp Barton Website. Baden-Powell Council. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  12. "Camp Barton Off-Season Camping". Camp Barton Website. Baden-Powell Council. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  13. 1 2 "Camp Tuscarora". Camp Tuscarora Website. Baden-Powell Council. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  14. "Camp Tuscarora Program". Camp Tuscarora Website. Baden-Powell Council. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  15. "Five Rivers Council Districts". Five Rivers Council Website. Five Rivers Council. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  16. Historic Hodge Podge
  17. http://www.wnyscouting.org/districts/17419
  18. "Hiawatha-Seaway Council History". Hiawatha-Seaway Council Website. Hiawatha-Seaway Council. Archived from the original on June 12, 2007. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  19. "Hiawatha-Seaway Council Camping". Hiawatha-Seaway Council Website. Hiawatha-Seaway Council. Archived from the original on June 9, 2007. Retrieved June 21, 2007.
  20. 1 2 "Hiawatha-Seaway Council Districts". Hiawatha-Seaway Council Website. Hiawatha-Seaway Council. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
  21. "Cayuga District, Longhouse Council | Just another Longhouse Council, BSA Sites site". Cnyscouts.org. Retrieved October 4, 2013.
  22. Cayuga Boy Scouts Council loses its charter
  23. Cayuga County Council Loses Charter Becomes a District in Hiawatha Seaway Council | ScoutingNews
  24. "History | Longhouse Council, BSA". Cnyscouts.org. Retrieved January 18, 2014.
  25. LA World Brotherhood Camporee
  26. http://www.nachanimat.org
  27. "Long House News" (PDF). Iroquois Trail Council. September 2006. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  28. http://www.onteroraus.org
  29. http://www.scoutcamphenderson.org
  30. http://www.otschodela.org/nationalpatches/baseballhalloffame.htm
  31. http://www.camptrimount.org
  32. http://www.halfmoonlodge28.org
  33. "Visit Woodworth and Pick-up Unit Plaques". Trcscouting.org. Retrieved October 4, 2013.
  34. "Skull Field". Campboyhaven.org. Retrieved October 4, 2013.
  35. http://www.kittanlodge.org
  36. "GS Central: Visit Us". GSUSA. Retrieved June 23, 2009.
  37. O'Toole, Jennifer. "91st Sojourners: Hudson Valley’s First Unisex Scouting Troop". Hudson Valley Magazine. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  38. Dicker, Ron. "Todd Schweikert, Brooklyn Dad, Forms Scout Troop That Welcomes Girls And Gay Members". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
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