Scouting in Alaska | |||
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![]() Alaska Council's Mount McKinley Explorer Trek
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Great Alaska Council (#610) | |||
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Owner | Boy Scouts of America | ||
Headquarters | Anchorage, Alaska | ||
Country | United States | ||
Founded | 1934 | ||
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Website scoutingalaska.org |
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Midnight Sun Council (#696) | |||
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Owner | Boy Scouts of America | ||
Headquarters | Fairbanks, Alaska | ||
Country | United States | ||
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Website midnightsunbsa.org |
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Farthest North Girl Scout Council | |||
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Owner | GSUSA | ||
Headquarters | Fairbanks, Alaska | ||
Country | United States | ||
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Website fairbanksgirlscouts.org |
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Girl Scouts of Alaska | |||
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Owner | GSUSA | ||
Headquarters | Anchorage, Alaska | ||
Country | United States | ||
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Website girlscoutsalaska.org |
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Scouting in Alaska has a long history, from the 1920s to the present day, serving thousands of youth in programs that suit the environment in which they live. Alaska shares a communal Scout history, only being broken into smaller councils in the 1960s.
Scouting came to Alaska in the 1920s, and the Alaska Territorial Council was created in the 1930s.
There are two Boy Scouts of America local councils in Alaska.
The Western Alaska Council and Southeast Alaska Council merged to form the Great Alaska Council in January, 2006. The combined Supercouncil has 3,000 volunteers serving 16,000 youth. The Western Alaska Council was formed in 1954 from a part of the Seattle Council, which had absorbed the Alaska Council in 1954.
Scouts in the Russian oblast of Magadan have a relationship with the Great Alaska Council.
Nanuk Lodge #355 absorbed Kootz Lodge #523 when Western Alaska Council merged with Southeast Alaska Council.
Nanuk Lodge was created in 1947, and is celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2007.
The Midnight Sun Council serves interior and northern Alaska, and is headquartered in Fairbanks.
Toontuk Lodge #549 was founded in 1961. The lodge is named after the barren ground caribou, which is known to the Yupik Eskimo people of Western Alaska as Toontuk. Toontuk Lodge was recognized with the National Service Grant in 1997. The money was used to rehabilitate the waterfront at Lost Lake Scout Camp with sand and a lifeguard tower. In 2006, Toontuk Lodge celebrated its 45th anniversary. Among its projects that year, the Lodge gave the Council a large amphitheater sited on Lost Lake at Lost Lake Camp.
As of October 2009 two Girl Scout councils exist in Alaska.
The Farthest North Girl Scout Council serves the largest geographical area of any of the more than 300 Girl Scout Councils in the United States, serving everything from the 63rd parallel north of the Alaska Range, more than 350,000 square miles (910,000 km2).