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The BSA is the largest youth organization in the United States. Its aim is to provide an educational program for boys and young adults to build character, to train in the responsibilities of participating citizenship, and to develop personal fitness. The purpose of the BSA, to develop character and leadership, is carried on primarily through outdoor activities including camping, hiking, canoeing and other related activities. There is an emphasis on personal development through community service, assuming leadership positions, and individual challenge through Merit Badges.
The principal founders were Ernest Thompson Seton and William D. Boyce who first incorporated the BSA on February 8, 1910, on the model of scouting established by Robert Baden-Powell. U.S. President Woodrow Wilson signed a bill chartering the Boy Scouts of America as a private organization on June 15, 1916. [1]
Because Baden-Powell was also associated with the YMCA in Britain, news of the early Boy Scout manual, Scouting for BoysScouting for Boys: A Handbook for Instruction in Good Citizenship Through Woodcraft is the first book on Scouting. It was written and illustrated by Robert Baden-Powell, founder of the Scout Movement. It is based on his boyhood experiences, his experience, had already reached the United States. The Boy Scout movement, however, did not reach the U.S. until 1909Events January 5 Colombia recognizes the independence of Panama. January 16 Ernest Shackleton's expedition finds the magnetic South Pole. January 28 United States troops leave Cuba after being there since the Spanish-American War. February 12 The National, when it was instituted by William D. Boyce.
The story of how Boyce came to be interested in Scouting has appeared in various forms. All versions agree on the following: Boyce, a publisher from ChicagoThis article is about the city, for other uses of the term see Chicago (disambiguation : Hog butcher for the world,Tool maker, stacker of wheat,Player with railroads and the nation's freight handler;Stormy, husky, brawling,City of the big shoulders. Carl, was lost in LondonLondon is the capital of the United Kingdom and of England, and with over seven million inhabitants in the Greater London area, is the second-most populous conurbation in Europe (after Moscow). From being Londinium the capital of the Roman province of Bri's famous fogFor the abbreviation, see FOG For the B-Side by Radiohead see Fog (song . Carrollton, Georgia, but the sky remains clear. Fog is cloud in contact with the ground. It occurs when moisture form the surface of the Earth evaporates; as this evaporated moistur when he was met by a boy who showed him the way to his destination; the boy then refused an offer of payment for his services.
Some versions claim that Boyce actually knew about Scouting before he ever met the boy in question, having in fact come to London with the intent of learning more about the organization, and that the place he was seeking in the fog was actually Scouting headquarters. Some assert that the boy vanished into the fog after refusing Boyce's money, but others declare that the two arranged to meet again, so that the boy could show Boyce to the headquarters. Still others hold that the boy was uniformed at the time. The truth of the matter may never be known for sure.
Boyce returned to the United States and, with two other businessmen, Edward S. Stewart and Stanley D. Willis , incorporated the Boy Scouts of America. The first troop was Troop 1, based at a YMCA. Edgar Robinson , an important administrator of the YMCA in Chicago, agreed to help Boyce organize the Boy Scouts as a national organization.
The BSA had many rival organizations in its early days, including:
The Woodcraft Indians and the Sons of Daniel Boone eventually merged with Boyce's organization; the consolidation was complete by the late 1910s.
The Boy Scouts of America was successfully organized by 1910, when Seton, Beard and Baden-Powell, along with Boyce, Edgar Robinson and others, called a national meeting. The first national officers were selected, and it was agreed that the President of the United States (then Taft) was to be the Honorary President of the BSA, a tradition that is still followed today. The Scouts were then incorporated by Boyce on February 8, 1910.
In 1911, the Boy Scouts of America published the first American Boy Scout manual ("Handbook for Boys"), a revision of Seton's version. This was the first appearance of the American Scout Oath and Law. The British version was a pledge of allegiance to the King. James E. West wrote the Scout Oath, and added three points to the British version of the Scout Law (brave, clean and reverent).
In 1912, Sea Scouting became an official program. Sea Scouting is now part of the Venturing program of the Boy Scouts of America focused primarily on maritime activities. Boys' Life magazine also began in 1912, and continues today to be the official Boy Scout magazine. In 1913, the Scouting magazine for leaders started.
Boy Scouts have served at every presidential inauguration since Woodrow Wilson's in 1913.
In 1916 Paul Sleman , Colin H. Livingstone , Ernest S. Martin and James E. West successfully lobbied Congress for a federal charter for BSA. Also in 1916, Baden-Powell organized Wolf Cubs in Britain, for boys too young for the Boy Scouts (minimum age twelve at the time). In BSA, Wolf Cubs became Cub Scouts.
In 1919 Baden-Powell began a training program called Wood Badge for adult leaders in Scouting. It was instituted all over the world and is still in use today.
In 1920 the first International Scout Jamboree, a gathering of scouts from all over the world, was held in London. Jamborees are currently held every four years, in varying countries. It will never be held in the United States because BSA, in contrast to numerous other Scouting organizations around the globe, accepts female youth members only within its Venturing Division, and not in the Cub Scout or Boy Scout divisions.
In 1937, oil magnate Waite Phillips donated to the BSA a large tract of land in the Rocky Mountains of New Mexico. This is now the Philmont Scout Ranch.
The Order of the Arrow, a Scouting Honor Society began in 1915. It was officially recognized by the National Council in 1936 and became fully integrated into the BSA in 1948.