Maine Boy Scouts will be celebrated the 100th anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America’s Order of the Arrow on July 16th at Camp William Hinds with the national ArrowTour event.
The
Order of the Arrow (OA) is the Boy
Scouts of America’s National Honor Society, and its members are scouts who best
exemplify the Scout Oath and Law in their daily lives and who encourage and participate
in camping, responsible outdoor adventure, environmental stewardship and
community service.
There
are 178,000 members of the OA nationwide, and 900 in Maine. Clyde Nason from
Troop 800 in Raymond was the oldest Scout at the event and the oldest living
member of the local Order of the Arrow chapter.
“For
almost 100 years, being a servant leader is what the Order of the Arrow has
been all about,” said Alex Call, national chief of the Order of the Arrow. “It is our hope that ArrowTour will be an
opportunity to tell the story of the Order
of the Arrow by reflecting on our past and at the same time motivating
others to give of themselves in service to others in the future.”
The
ArrowTour’s stop at Camp Hinds in Raymond was one of 110 it will make
nationwide.
In
addition to displays discussing the 100 years of the OA, Scouts were able to do
silk-screening, branding of leather goods, challenge games and see individual
lodge exhibitions.
The
event closed with a campfire, and featured storytelling and the presentation of
the Centurion Award to Bruce Rueger, Francis Maguire, Paul Conley, Joshua
Gagnon, Eri Martin, Scott Valcourt, Michael Mirisola and Wayne Holden. There
are only 700 in the country who have received that honor.
The
Order of the Arrow was founded by Dr.
E. Urner Goodman and Carroll A. Edson in 1915 at the Treasure Island Camp of
the Philadelphia Council, Boy Scouts of America. It became an official program
experiment in 1922, and was approved as part of the Scouting program in 1934.
In 1948, the OA, recognized as the
BSA's national brotherhood of honor campers, became an official part of the Boy
Scouts of America. In 1998, the Order of
the Arrow became recognized as Scouting's National Honor Society when it
expanded its reach beyond camping to include broader service to Scouting and
the community.
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