President Woodrow Wilson inspects
Scouts right before World War 1
First Cub Scout Pack in 1929, put
together a year before the BSA officially started the Cub Scouting
program
Eagle Scout Paul Siple (left) salutes
with Chief Scout Executive West. Siple had sailed to Antarctica with
Commander Byrd in 1928.
At an early jamboree, a Scout enjoys
his lunch
Norman Rockwell painted this
self-portrait for the 1969 official calendar. Rockwell was the visual
spokesman for BSA, for over 60 years, through hundreds of classic
paintings, that expressed the spirit and ideals of Scouting.
Rockwell's "Homecoming,"
1961.
On the 51st anniversary in 1961,
President Kennedy greets Explorer Scouts with the official,
left-handed handshake.
1912 at the first official Boy Scout
Camp at Silver Bay on Lake George, New York
Some of the boys that were invited to
camp out at Ernest Seton's estate, where Seton taught them Indian
lore and how to live in the outdoors.
In 1912, a Scout greets Baden-Powell,
as he arrives in the U S., with a letter from President Taft.
The first Chief Scout Executive, James
West takes a picture with some of the early Eagle Scouts
Arthur Eldred, the first Eagle Scout
In 1982, Alexander Holsinger became the
one millionth Eagle Scout.