Scouting in Maine | |||
---|---|---|---|
Memorial Day parade in Springvale, Maine
|
|||
Cub Scouts make ice fishing lures in Eddington
|
|||
|
|||
Katahdin Area Council (#216) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Owner | Boy Scouts of America | ||
Headquarters | Bangor, ME | ||
Country | United States | ||
Founded | 1919 | ||
President | William Lucy | ||
Council Commissioner | Belinda Hoffses | ||
Scout Executive | Scott Harvey | ||
|
|||
Website katahdinareabsa.org |
|||
Katahdin Scout Reservation | |||
---|---|---|---|
Owner | Katahdin Area Council | ||
Location | Eddington, Maine | ||
Country | United States | ||
Coordinates | 44°46′07″N 68°33′12″W / 44.76863380°N 68.55345540°W | ||
Founded | 1921 | ||
|
|||
Pamola Lodge 211 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Pamola Lodge Pocket Flap
|
|||
Totem | Running Deer | ||
Founded | 1941 | ||
Lodge Chief | Alex Taylor-Lash | ||
Lodge Adviser | Les Stackpole | ||
Staff Adviser | Art Morgan | ||
|
|||
Pine Tree Council | |||
---|---|---|---|
Owner | Boy Scouts of America | ||
Headquarters | Portland, ME | ||
Country | United States | ||
Founded | 1919 | ||
President | Horace Horton | ||
Council Commissioner | Clinton Staples | ||
Scout Executive | Eric Tarbox | ||
|
|||
Website pinetreebsa |
|||
Camp William Hinds | |||
---|---|---|---|
Owner | Pine Tree Council | ||
Location | Raymond, Maine | ||
Country | United States | ||
Coordinates | 43°56′58″N 70°28′10″W / 43.94934°N 70.46936°W | ||
Founded | 1927 | ||
|
|||
Website www |
|||
Girl Scouts of Maine | |||
---|---|---|---|
Map of Girl Scout Councils in Maine
|
|||
Headquarters | South Portland, Maine | ||
Country | United States | ||
|
|||
Website girlscoutsofmaine.org |
|||
Scouting in Maine dates back to the creation of the Katahdin Area Council in 1920 and has continued prominently to the present day.
Boy Scouting started early in Maine, with two local councils in operation by February 1915. The first second class council was in operation by 1916, and by 1917 three second class councils existed, in Auburn, Bath and Saco. South Portland Council began in 1918, as did Waterville Council, but that council apparently only existed for a year. Bangor, Old Town and Portland Councils were begun in 1919 in those localities, while in that same year Auburn, Bath and Saco's councils all ceased to exist. Old Town's council ceased to exist in 1920, while Oxford County Council (#219) was formed, with its headquarters in South Paris, Maine.
In 1921, South Portland Council ceased to exist, while a new one, Biddeford & Saco Council, blossomed once again in Saco. Bangor Council opened Camp Roosevelt, believed to be the first council camp in Maine, the same year. Portland Council changed its name to Cumberland County Council in 1922, no doubt reflecting its expansion beyond the city of Portland (Portland Council had probably absorbed South Portland Council's troops upon its demise the previous year). No organizational changes appear to have occurred in 1923, but big changes would occur the next year.
In 1924, the leaders of Bangor Council took a step similar to that taken by Portland Council in 1922; they changed the council's name to one more reflective of the region served—Penobscot Council—with the change effective at the New Year. Meanwhile, Scouting in the Saco area again took a down turn, with Biddeford & Saco Council ceasing to exist. Oxford County Council also ceased to exist in 1924.
In September 1925 organizers formed a council headquartered in Rockland—Pine Tree Council. Camden was added to this council in 1928, but then Pine Tree Council was absorbed into Cumberland County Council in 1929. The latter council had been growing quite nicely already, as it had added eight towns in Oxford County in May 1929. Also added in 1929 were units in Sagadahoc, Franklin, and Kennebec Counties, as well as those in parts of Knox, Lincoln, and Somerset Counties. Five more towns in Knox County were added in 1930.
Organizers in Saco tried again in 1927, forming York County Council, which also included units in Biddeford and North Berwick. Units in Somersworth, New Hampshire joined York County Council in 1929, but that town moved to New Hampshire's Daniel Webster Council in 1932.