J OURNAL Forgotten First Badges of the BSA INTERNATIONAL SCOUTING COLLECTORS ASSOCIATION

JOURNAL
INTERNATIONAL SCOUTING COLLECTORS ASSOCIATION
Vol 13, No. 1 , March 2013
Forgotten First Badges of the BSA
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
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INTERNATIONAL SCOUTING
COLLECTORS ASSOCIATION, INC
CHAIRMAN
PRESIDENT
TERRY GROVE, 2048 Shadyhill Terr., Winter Park, FL 32792
(321) 214-0056 [email protected]
CRAIG LEIGHTY, 800 Painted Shore Ct., Oakley, CA 94561
(925) 548-9966 [email protected]
BOARD MEMBERS
VICE PRESIDENTS:
BILL LOEBLE, 685 Flat Rock Rd., Covington, GA 30014-0908, (770) 385-9296, [email protected]
Activities
BRUCE DORDICK, 916 Tannerie Run Rd., Ambler, PA 19002, (215) 628-8644 [email protected]
Administration
JAMES ELLIS, 405 Dublin Drive, Niles, MI 49120, (269) 683-1114, [email protected]
Communications
TOD JOHNSON, PO Box 10008, South Lake Tahoe, CA 96158, (650) 224-1400,
[email protected]
Finance & Membership
DAVE THOMAS, 5335 Spring Valley Rd., Dallas, TX 75254, (972) 991-2121, [email protected]
Legal
JEF HECKINGER, P.O. Box 1492, Rockford, IL 61105, (815) 965-2121, [email protected]
Marketing
AREAS SERVED:
GENE BERMAN, 8801 35th Avenue, Jackson Heights, NY 11372, (718) 458-2292,
[email protected]
BOB CYLKOWSKI, 1003 Hollycrest Dr., Champaign, IL 61821, (217) 778-8109,
[email protected]
KIRK DOAN, 1201 Walnut St., #2500, Kansas City, MO 64100, (816) 691-2600,
[email protected]
TRACY MESLER, 1205 Cooke St., Nocona, TX 76255, (940) 825-4438,
[email protected]
DAVE MINNIHAN, 2300 Fairview G202, Costa Mesa, CA 92626, (714) 641-4845,
[email protected]
JOHN PLEASANTS,1478 Old Coleridge Rd., Siler City, NC 27344, (919) 742-5199,
[email protected]
Advertising Sales
TICO PEREZ, 919 Wald Rd., Orlando, FL 32806, (407) 857-6498,
[email protected]
JASON SPANGLER, 3685 Kale Drive, Lumberton, NC 28358, (910) 671-4919,
[email protected]
JODY TUCKER, 4411 North 67th St., Kansas City, KS 66104, (913) 299-6692,
[email protected]
Web Site Management
The International Scouting Collectors Association Journal, “The ISCA Journal,” (ISSN 1535-1092) is the official quarterly publication
of the International Scouting Collectors Association, Inc. (ISCA) and is issued in March, June, September, and December by the
International Scouting Collectors Association., Inc., 405 Dublin Lane, Niles, MI 49120. Periodicals Postage Paid at Niles, MI and at
additional mailing offices. Annual membership dues are $10. Member subscription for a printed copy of the International Scouting
Collectors Association Journal is $25.00 per year (50.00 per year for delivery outside the United States). The International Scouting
Collectors Association, Inc. is a non-profit organization which is staffed and operated solely by volunteers and has no affiliation with the
Boy Scouts of America. Views expressed in this publication are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the official position
of the International Scouting Collectors Association, Inc. ©2012, International Scouting Collectors Association, Inc. Printed in the USA.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The International Scouting Collectors Association Journal, c/o James Ellis, 405 Dublin
Lane, Niles, MI 49120
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ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
JOURNAL STAFF
ON THE INSIDE
EDITOR
FEATURES
JAMES ELLIS
405 Dublin Lane
Niles, MI 49120
Phone (269) 683-1114
[email protected]
Call For DSA Nominations
Forgotten First Badges of the BSA
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COLUMNS
COLUMNISTS
Chairman’s and President’s Message
ISCA News
TOR Calendar
Picture of the Quarter
News From The National Scouting Museum
Looking For Red & Whites
Way Back When World Jamboree Connections
OA News
Collecting Camp Patches
CSP Corner
Happy Trails
Hobby Trends
Advertisements
COLLECTING CAMP PATCHES: BOB SHERMAN
4640 Main St., Stratford, CT 06614 (203) 378-9154
[email protected]
THE CSP CORNER: STEVE AUSTIN
8237 Tuna Path, Liverpool, NY 13090 (315) 456-1511,
[email protected]
HAPPY TRAILS: LARRY FAULKNER
480 Fieldstone Drive, Helena, AL 35080 (205) 540-0954,
[email protected]
HOBBY TRENDS: ROY MORE
5150 Carpenter Rd., Ypsilanti, MI 48197 (734) 434-8772
[email protected]
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LOOKING FOR RED AND WHITES: BLAKE KEASEY
1380 Oak Grove Drive, Decatur, GA 30033 (404) 321-7433
[email protected]
Publication and Advertising Deadlines
NECKERCHIEF SLIDES: JOHN KOPPEN
12705 NW Puddy Gulch Rd., Yamhill, OR 97148 (503) 662-3953
[email protected]
ADVERTISING
EDITORIAL
ORDER OF THE ARROW NEWS: DAVE MINNIHAN &
BRUCE SHELLEY
2300 Fairview, G202, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 (714) 641-4845
[email protected]
Vol. 13, No. 2
Vol. 13, No. 3
04/01/2013
07/01/2013
04/15/2013
07/15/2013
WAY BACK WHEN: DAVID C. SCOTT
6636 Briar Cove Drive, Dallas, TX 75254 (214) 616-0161
[email protected]
Submissions should be made to the ISCA Journal Editor. Materials
should be submitted in the following manner, unless prior arrangements
are made:
ISCA Journal Submission Guidelines
Text should be submitted through e-mail, or on disk, in a text file
or MS-WORD form.
WORLD JAMBOREE CONNECTIONS: NEIL LARSEN
4332 Marigold Ave, Vadnais Heights, MN 55127-3540
Images should be submitted separately and not embedded in
text files. All images must be scanned at 300 dpi and saved at
a high quality, in a tiff or jpeg format. If there are limited images,
high quality hard copy can be submitted.
ISCA Regional Coordinators
A desired layout can be submitted, but ISCA reserves the right
to edit material or layout.
All submissions must be made in advance of the submission
deadline. No exceptions will be made.
NORTHEAST REGION
Greg Anthony
The Editor is available to assist writers regarding the preparation
of articles and submission of materials.
[email protected]
Submission materials will be returned if requested. The
International Scouting Collectors Association, Inc. retains
copyright over all materials published in the ISCA Journal, unless
express written permission for use is given.
SOUTHEAST REGION
Bill Biggerstaff
[email protected]
Advertising Rates
CENTRAL REGION
Kory Lewis
[email protected]
WESTERN REGION
Rick Bedsworth ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
[email protected]
Full Page
Half Page 1/4 Page 1/4 Page for TOR 165.00
$82.50
$41.25
$25.00
Special placement fees 50-200% All advertising submissions
should be made to the Advertising Manager and meet the
ISCA Journal submission guidelines and deadlines.
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CHAIRMAN’S & PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE
Tenth ISCA Convention, Annual Board
Meeting and Dallas Trade-O-Ree
ISCA held its 10th Annual Convention in Dallas in conjunction with the 35th
Dallas Trade-o-ree in January. Attendance to the trade-o-ree seemed a little
down from previous years, but there was still a lot of people from all over the
country and from what we heard, there were some pretty good sales. An ISCA
Board meeting was held prior to the Trade-o-ree and a total of five workshops
were held during the Trade-o-ree. One of the sessions was an open session
Terry Grove
Craig Leighty
on ISCA with questions and answers about some of the latest on ISCA and
Chairman
President
ISCA’s role in the 2013 National Jamboree including the Collections merit
badge and the evening trading activity. It was noted that we could still use a
couple more people to help staff the Collections merit badge. More details, or to express interest, can be obtained from Rick
Bedsworth ([email protected]).
During the board meeting, the new regional structure under the guidance of VP Activities, Bill Loeble, was discussed. More
volunteers are needed to cover all lodges and councils to include history projects, coordination, and other as determined in the
future. If you would like to volunteer and/or get more information on what is involved, please contact Bill at (bloeble@beaverloc.
com) or one of the regional coordinators: Northeast Region - Greg Anthony ([email protected]), Southern Region - Bill
Biggerstaff ([email protected]), Central Region - Kory Lewis ([email protected]) and Western Region Rick Bedsworth ([email protected]).
2013 National Scout Jamboree
As discussed before in past Journals, ISCA is involved in two ways this summer at the 2013 National Scout Jamboree at the
Summit.
Patch trading at the Summit for the 2013 National Scout Jamboree will for the first time become an official program activity
administered by the Summit Program Leadership Action Team (S.P.L.A.T.) in an “Arena Experience” area. This Arena
Experience area will be the location for a number of great activities such as games, entertainment, special presentations, and
patch trading. ISCA will provide support for the patch trading venue by offering resource materials and information, logistic,
planning and organizational support, and monitoring of the area(s) during the Jamboree by providing ISCA members to be on
staff. ISCA has organized a team to support this activity under Craig Leighty. If you have any questions or would like more
information, please contact him at ([email protected]).
ISCA will also again sponsor the Collections Merit Badge. It will be offered in an area adjacent to where the patch trading
activity will occur and will include a number of displays that can be used for both the merit badge and also as a resource for
the patch trading activity. Jamboree staff positions are still available. For additional details and/or to express interest, contact
Rick Bedsworth ([email protected]).
Membership Updates & Subscriptions to the Journal
As most of you are aware, we try to notify you when your annual membership fee is coming due (if you are not a life member)
and also if you subscribe to the journal through the mail, when your subscription fee is also due. The easiest way for us to give
you that reminder is to send you an email. Most all of you have supplied us with your email address (in your on-line member
profile), but some of you have not. We encourage all of you upon reading this to log into the ISCA website and update your
profile to include your email so you can receive the occasional ISCA updates (usually about once a quarter) and also get
notification if anything is about to expire related to your account. If you have trouble doing so, please send an email to Craig.
[email protected] and we can help you do it. You can also pay your dues and subscribe to a printed copy of the Journal
on-line at any time. If you still only feel comfortable with doing things through the mail, the address is: ISCA, PO Box 10008,
South Lake Tahoe, CA 96158 and mark it attention Tod Johnson.
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ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Planning to Move or Already Moved?
Have you recently moved or are you planning a move in the near future? If so, make sure that you go
to the ISCA website and update your address information or send a change of address notification to
Tod Johnson (see address on inside of front cover). Effective as of the January ISCA Board meeting,
ISCA will no longer replace Journals free of charge that were not delivered due to the member not
updating their mailing information.
All issues of the Journal are now available online and most back issues can be ordered from Jason
Spangler at [email protected].
Authors Wanted
Jamboree Staff Needed
ISCA members are needed to provide support at the 2013 National Scout Jamboree for the patch trading venue
and the Collections Merit Badge. For additional details and/or to express interest, contact Craig Leighty for patch
trading ([email protected]) or Rick Bedsworth for Collections Merit Badge ([email protected]).
Membership Applications and
Renewals
Check your mailing label - if it reads “Dues Paid Thru 03/30/2013” THIS IS YOUR LAST ISSUE unless
you renew immediately.
A ­renewal reminder may also be mailed, but don’t count on it and risk missing an issue! Now would be a
good time to check your collecting codes too and update them if needed.
We no longer backdate memberships, so if you miss an issue you’ll have to buy it online from the ISCA
store.
To join ISCA or renew your membership please go to www.ScoutTrader.org or
send your application*/renewal to:
ISCA Membership
P.O. Box 10008, So. Lake Tahoe, CA 96158
($35 for a yearly subscription, $10 for online subscription,
$25 for printed subscription if a life member, $60 for foreign subscription.)
*Applications are available online or from the ISCA Membership Vice President
at the above address.
DO NOT SEND RENEWALS TO THE EDITOR
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
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ISCA NEWS
The Journal is looking for a few good authors to write a quarterly column and share their knowledge
and wisdom with the membership. We’re also looking for authors to write a feature story on some special area of collecting. Are you an expert in religious awards, Baden-Powel memorabilia, international
scouting collectibles, high adventure, etc.? If you are and would like to be a writer for the Journal,
please contact Jim Ellis at [email protected].
NOMINATIONS FOR THE 2013 ISCA
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD
Who:
Any active member of ISCA who has not
received the award before or who is not
serving on the 2013 Award Nominating
Committee.
2013 ISCA DSA
What:
The International Scouting Collectors
Association’s “Scouting Memorabilia
Distinguished Service Award.”
This award was created to recognize
those individuals that have contributed
significantly to the hobby of Scouting
memorabilia collecting and to Scouting
itself.
Recipients of this award are collectors
of Scouting memorabilia who have
distinguished
themselves
through
their diligent work and involvement in
Scouting; through the high quality of their
memorabilia collections; through their
unselfish contribution to the knowledge
base of collecting by sharing information,
displaying their collections, and writing
articles and books; through their longstanding service to Scouting memorabilia
organizations; and, overall, through
their presence as a positive force in the
Scouting memorabilia collecting hobby.
They must be active members of ISCA.
When and Where:
The ISCA Distinguished Service Award is
presented annually at a national event.
Past venues have included the Dallas
Trade-O-Ree and the PRE-NOAC TradeO-Ree.
How:
Under ISCA’s bylaws, the ISCA Chairman
of the Board of Directors appoints the
Chairman of the Nominating Committee
for a fixed term.
The Nominating
Committee Chairman will then appoint
a committee of members with the
concurrence of the ISCA Chairman of
the Board of Directors. Members can
succeed themselves on the committee.
This year’s committee is chaired by
Bruce Dordick.
PRIOR
RECIPIENTS
Nominations will be made to the
Nominating Committee directly by the
members of ISCA. The nomination
deadline, determined by the Committee,
is April 10, 2013. Nominations may be
hand-delivered, mailed, or emailed and
must be in writing to be considered. Each
nomination should include the personal
contact information for the candidate
and a short synopsis of the nominee’s
involvement in Scouting and how this
person has contributed to the hobby of
Scouting memorabilia collecting.
Nominations should be sent to Bruce
Dordick, 916 Tannerie Run Rd., Ambler,
PA 19002 or emailed to brucedor@aol.
com.
Once the nominations are received:
(a) The Nominating Committee, based
on the written materials presented
on behalf of the candidates, will
recommend no less than three
candidates to the ISCA Chairman of
the Board and the ISCA President for
concurrence.
(b) Following concurrence by the ISCA
Chairman and the ISCA President,
the Nominating Committee will
present the candidates to the
membership of ISCA in the June
issue of the ISCA Journal and on the
ISCA Website.
(c) The voting deadline will be listed in
the Journal and on the ISCA website.
Each member of ISCA may cast one vote.
Voting will require ISCA membership
number and name, and can be done in
one of three ways:
1. snail mail to the Chairman of the
Nominating Committee
2. email to the Chairman
Nominating Committee
of
the
3. voting on the ISCA website – the
website will contain clear instructions
for electronic ballots.
The person receiving the most votes –
the plurality — will be the DSA recipient.
In the case of a tie vote, a majority vote
by the Nominating Committee with
certification of the ISCA Chairman of the
Board and ISCA President will determine
the winner.
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ISCA salutes the prior
recipients of the ISCA
Scouting
Memorabilia
Distinguished
Service
Award (including predecessor awards) listed below:
Carmella Russo
E. Forest Reynolds
Elmer Fennert
Paul Myers
Dave Leubitz
Bill Price
John Sell
Bernie Miller
Raymond Lee
Brian Lee
Don Isbell
Mike Fulco
Cliff Alexander
Paul Kramer
Jack Mitzman
Prince Watkins
George Boxer
Alan O’Connor
Bill Kern
Ken Wiltz
Harry Thorsen
Dave Minnihan
Dwight Bischel
Gene Berman
Albertus Hoogeveen
Mitch Reis
Conley Williams
Bill Topkis
Terry Grove
John Pannell
Kelly Williams
Craig Leighty
Jeff Morley
Roy More
Chris Jensen
Jim Ellis
Doug Krutilek
Bruce Dordick
Ron Aldridge
Bob Hannah
Bob Sherman
The award winners are listed
in order from the first to most
recent. Some individuals were
awarded the award more than
once since they received it from
one or more of the predecessor
organizations that now make up
ISCA.
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Missouri - Southeast Missouri Boy Scout Memorabilia
Swap Meet
Dates: 3/1/2013 thru 3/2/2013
Location: VFW Hall, 1049 North Kingsway Drive, Cape
Girardeau, Missouri
Contact: Jerry Hampton
1305 Kingsway
Cape Girardeau, MO 63701,
(573) 334-5392 or cell (573) 450-6763, headcabbage@
charter.net
California - Ta Tanka Lodge 488 Trade-O-Ree
Dates: 5/4/2013
Location: St. Matthews United Methodist Church,
15653 East Newton St., Hacienda Heighths, CA
Contact: Dave Minnihan,
2300 Fairview Rd., #G202,
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
(714) 641-4845,
dave.
[email protected]
Illinois - Calumet Council All Chicago Area Swap
Meet
Dates: 5/24/2013 thru 5/25/2013
Location: St Christopher’’s Church Gymnasium,
147th (Sibley Blvd) & Keeler, Midlothian, Illinois
Contact: James Scherbarth, (708) 7471904,
[email protected] or Albin Sporny, (708) 4788040,
[email protected]
Pennsylvania - 29th. Annual Pittsburgh TOR
Dates: 3/8/2013 thru 3/9/2013
Location: Holiday Inn, 8256 University Blvd., Moon Township
Pa. 15108
Contact: Conrad Auel
1516 Jones St. Monessen, PA 15062
724-684-8585
[email protected] or Steve
DeWick, 126 Sheldon Ave.,
Pittsburgh, PA 15220,
(412) 9212089,
[email protected]
Texas - The Lone Star Trade O Ree
Dates: 5/31/2013 thru 6/1/2013
Location: St Francis of Assisi Church; Family Life
Center (Building), 861 Wildwood Ln., Grapevine, TX
Contact: John Ryan,
P O Box 1062,
Colleyville, TX 76034, (817) 939-5673, [email protected]
New Jersey - 34th Annual Northeast Trade-O-Ree
Dates: 3/10/2013
Location: Guardian Angel Church -- East Allendale Ave,
Allendale, NJ
Contact: Ed Quinn, (201) 845-7777, [email protected]
Michigan - Great Lakes Council Michigan TOR
Dates: 3/15/2013 thru 3/16/2013
Location: Wyckoff Lodge Dining Hall, 880 E. Sutton Road,
Metamora, Michigan
Contact: Scott Wheeler,
28453 Cotton Rd.,
Chesterfield, MI 48047-(586) 817-0654,
[email protected] or Denver Laabs,
1100 County Center Drive, West
Waterford, MI 48328
(248)
338-0035,
[email protected]
Oregon - 3rd Annual Cascade TOR
Dates: 3/23/2013
Location: St. Mary School Gym, 1066 N 6th Ave., Stayton, OR
Contact:
Todd Hatfield, (503) 859-2443,
[email protected] or
Scott West, [email protected]
Wisconsin - 14th Annual Midwest Tradefest
Dates: 4/5/2013 thru 4/6/2013
Location: Immaculate Heart of Mary Church/School, 4913
Schofield Road, Monona, WI
Contact: Kurt Hansen,
1209 Sweetbriar Rd.,
Madison, WI 53705,
(608) 238-9481,
[email protected]
New York - Central New York TOR
Dates: 6/7/2013 thru 6/8/2013
Location: Dining Hall, Camp Woodland - 491 Kibbe
Lake Rd., Constantia, NY
Contact: Stephen Austin,
8237 Tuna Path,
Liverpool, NY 13090,
(315) 456-1511,
[email protected]
Nevada - LV International Scouting Memorabilia
exchange & show ACES
Dates: 9/26/2013 thru 9/29/2013
Location: 9/26 ISM 3025 W Sahara
9/27-9/28th Palace Station and Casino, 2411 W
Sahara Ave Las Vegas, NV
Contact: F.T. RICK Bedsworth,
3025 W Sahara Ave.,
Ste 200,
Las Vegas, NV 89102,
(702) 561-2598,
cell
[email protected] or
James Arriola, 3025 W
Sahara Ave., Ste 200.
Las Vegas, NV 89102
(702)
878-7268,
[email protected]
Georgia - Atlanta Scout Memorabilia Show &
Trade-O-Ree
Dates: 9/27/2013 thru 9/28/2013
Location: Atlanta Area Council Volunteer Service
Center, 1800 Circle 75 Parkway, SE, Atlanta, GA
Contact: Bruce Lafitte,
(404) 697-8994, BLafitte@
nordson.com or Dave Corley, (770) 7073953,
[email protected]
Pennsylvania - Allentown Trade-O-Ree
Dates: 4/6/2013
Location: Jordan Lutheran Church, 5103 Snowdrift Rd.,
Orefield, PA
Contact: Mike Best or Scott Best,
5233 Spruce
St.,
Schnecksville, PA 18078,
(610) 767-6079,
tradeoree@
allentowntor.com
Want Your Trade-O-Ree Listed Here? List it on the
ISCA Website at www.scouttrader.org
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
TOR CALENDAR
Oklahoma - Tulsa (T-Town) Trade-O-Ree
Dates: 3/8/2013 thru 3/9/2013
Location: Econo Lodge Conference Room, 11620 E. Skelly
Drive (I-44 at 11th Street), Tulsa, Oklahoma
Contact 1: Larry Trook,
6410 E. 165th Bixby, OK 74008,
(918) 636-5480, [email protected] or Mike Cale (918) 272-3181,
[email protected]
New York - 2nd Capital District Trade-O-Ree
Dates: 5/3/2013 thru 5/4/2013
Location: Rensselaer Elks Lodge, 683 Rt 20
(Columbia Turnpike), East Greenbush, NY 12061
Contact: John Danylak,
E.Nassau, NY, jldan90646@
aol.com or J.A. Danylak, Rensselaer, NY 12201, [email protected]
7
THE FORGOTTEN FIRST BADGES
OF THE BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA
By Michael Feigenbaum
The first badges of the Boy Scouts
of America were made available in
November 1910. Around that time
Bulletin No. 6 was reprinted from the
BSA original headquarters at 128 East
28th Street in New York City. This
“Bulletin No. 6,” took the form of an 8
page illustrated Price List. It depicted
uniform parts, printed matter, including
a Handbook and now these first badges
for both Boy Scouts and leaders. The
new National Headquarters address at
200 Fifth Avenue was inscribed on the
bulletins cover, as they were to shortly
move into that new office on January 2,
1911 (Fig 1).
These first badges were designed after
the British model. They did not have an
Eagle superimposed on the fleur-delis, as the Scout Sign of today. But they
did have the symbol for “Truth and
Knowledge,” in the form of two stars.
The design patent was applied for by
Baden Powell as the assignor to the
Boy Scouts of America on December
30, 1910 and obtained on May 30,
1911 (Fig 2).
Fig 1
These badges for boys consisted of
Tenderfoot, Second, and First Class
pins in gold gilt (Fig 3). The Tenderfoot
and First Class Badge were also available in a
white metal finish for Patrol Leaders. The First
Fig 3
Fig 4
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ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Fig 2
Class white metal badge was to be used on the Patrol leaders
hat. While the gold one was to be worn on the Scout’s sleeve.
The Tenderfoot badge was a Lapel pin for use on a collar. It
had a round attachment on the backside, for inserting into button
holes. Safety pins were used on the backside of the Second and
First Class Badges. Unlike the British badges, which had two
looped posts. These posts would be pushed through the material
of a shirt or hat. A separate rod would then be inserted through
the two loops to hold the badge in place. This British concept of
attachment would continue to be used. Australia, Canada, New
Zealand, and other British Commonwealth countries, would use
them on large pins until around the 1960s.
Commissioner (Fig 5). The first plumes that had been issued and
shown in the catalog, did not have stars in them. But were soon
modified by the British manufacturer to include them. So NoStars and Stars both existed on these hat plumes used by the
The First Class badge had a distinctive line of Pearls or dots
embossed on it. These appear on the horizontal Ring holding the
three parts of the fleur-de-lis together. They can be seen on the
drawings in the Bulletin No. 6, price list and the US design patent
document. (Fig 4) This ornamentation also appears in a widely
published photo taken in September 1910 of Ernest Thompson
Seton, Baden-Powell, and Daniel Carter Beard. Behind them
a large Boy Scouts of America, National Headquarters banner
hangs, showing this first class badge.
BSA.
The badges for leaders took the form of hat pins with colored
horse hair plumes protruding from the topside. Red for
Assistant Scoutmaster, Green for Scoutmaster and Purple for
This Hat plume with no stars was also the first one used by
the British Boy Scout Association in 1908. But by 1910/1911
the British had moved on to a third, more elaborate plume. In
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
9
Fig 5
version of the British first class emblem.
Dr. West then asked his friend Clifford H.
Berryman, a famous Cartoonist employed
by the Washington Evening Star to create
a comprehensive drawing of that sketch.
The new design was submitted by James
E. West for a Patent on February 15, 1911
and approved on July 4, 1911.
1912 the Boy Scout Association once again
would change their hat plume, to include for
the first time, the American idea of 2 stars.
Many other countries would also adopt
these 2 stars on their distinctive national
Scout signs, including the World Scout
emblem.
Why did this new organization use metal
pins instead embroidered cloth emblems?
Because washing at the time was done
by hand. Clothes were scrubbed against
ribbed washboards. Dyes would fade and
the fibers of the cloth would wear with each
washing. While pins could be removed from
clothes and avoid the washing process.
Removable buttons were also widely used
at the time. Pins would continue to be used
by the BSA for the next few years
Daniel Carter Beard, the National Scout
Commissioner, felt that the BSA was
going in the wrong direction with the look
of this symbol. Beard wanted it to be
Americanized. He brought his idea up in
a discussion in January 1911 with James
E. West, the Chief Scout Executive. Daniel
Beard supplied a rough sketch showing
an Eagle superimposed over a modified
How many of these first badges were
purchased and earned in just a few
months?
Would this new organization
want these first badges and what they were
placed on to be seen any more. Would
they continue to issue them until they were
depleted. Or discard these emblems, once
the design with the superimposed eagle
was available? To be sure this new youth
movement was seeking the support and
admiration of the American people. Using
the American design with the eagle would
help them achieve that end.
These two Buttons were used on the
first Uniform Shirt and Coat, issued by Sources:
the B.S.A. The small one was 15mm in
diameter and the large one was 20mm. The History of the Boy Scouts of America,
“S EISNER & CO. RED BANK N.J.”, is William Murray; pages 24, 34, 49, 392, 462
inscribed on the backside.
United Patent Office; U. S. Patent No.
41,412
Picture of the
Quarter
Yes. I know that we’ve used this picture
before, but it is mentioned in
Michael Feigenbaum’s article above and
besides that its just a cool picture.
The picture was taken on September 23,
1910 atop BSA’s first headquarters in the
YMCA building at 124 E. 28th Street in
New York City. In the background you can
clearly see the banner referred to by
Michael showing the First Class insignia.
Pictured (Left-Right) Ernest Thompson
Seton, Baden-Powell, and Daniel Carter
Beard.
Courtesy of David Scott at Red Honor
Press
10
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
News from the National Scouting Museum
100 Years of Scouting Magazine Goes Online
By CORRY KANZENBERG, Curator of Collections and Exhibitions, National Scouting Museum
The product of a collaborative
effort between the Boy Scouts
of America and the University of North Texas, issues of
Scouting magazine from the
National Scouting Museum
Archives become available
online
this
March.
This
important resource is being introduced on the web just as the
magazine celebrates its onehundredth anniversary year.
In early 2012, our colleagues
over at Scouting approached
us with the idea of digitizing
the entire run of the magazine,
page by page. With a limited
budget and a desired launch
date of March 2013, we began researching the options
for successfully completing
such a massive undertaking.
Our friends nearby at the University of North Texas provided
a practical solution to scan, catalog, and upload the issues via
their unique online database,
The Portal to Texas History. As
the University looks to expand
its online history platform to a
national level, Scouting provides a chance to help them
meet this expectation. Offering
broad opportunities for exploration, the magazine’s availability
through an academic website
will foster new historical research on Scouting-related
topics. With more than 2 million
items to search from among
numerous contributing museums, libraries, and memory
institutions, users of the site
may happen upon cross-references to Scouting subjects
in a variety of documents in
addition to results from the official magazine. These might
include newspaper references,
or photographs, for example.
An issue of Scouting from the National Scouting Museum Archives.
This magazine and others are now available to browse for free on the web.
Currently, only the first decade of the magazine is accessible online. As additional issues are scanned, uploaded, and cataloged,
they will be made available as well. We hope you’ll enjoy perusing this new feature, and look forward to your feedback. You can view
issues and explore the project in process at: http://scoutingmagazine.org/, or http://texashistory.unt.edu/explore/collections/SCOUT/
browse/.
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
11
L
Looking For Red & Whites
Yet Another Variation
By
Blake Keasey
ISCA 0084L
Again, there is another variation to
report. This time it comes from Valley
Forge Council (PA). There are already
[email protected]
2 size variations, in which the name is
either 102 or 116 mm in length. Turns out that the 102 variation
comes up as both TTB and TBL (in the Council name). They are
both pictured so the tag differences can be seen. They will be
designated as VALLEY FORGE/COUNCIL (102/) TBL and VALLEY
FORGE/COUNCIL (102) TTB. TBL is the tougher variation.
There is one new 1/2KR and one new 1/2RW. The TRINITY
NECHES 1/2KR is a shorter format than the previously reported
Trinity-Neches Council. The MAUI COUNTY 1/2RW is a later
format of the previously reported Maui County 1/2KR.
It is rare that a new Sea Scout strip surfaces. The new find is
WASHINGTON, D.C. 1/2BW.
New Cub Scout strips are even rarer. We have 2, ALAMEDA
1/2BY from CA and YONKERS 1/2BY from NY.
Of the 4 new military base strips (mbs) all 3 of the 1/2KRs come
from different branches. From the US Marine Corps, we have
CHERRY POINT 1/2KR. Its construction in late 1941 began with
extensive malaria control work in a swampy section of NC. The
one from the US Air Force is ELEMDORF A.F.B. 1/2KR, which is
located in AK. From the US Army, we have DARMSTADT 1/2KR,
which is located in what had been West Germany. I even know the
Troop number (65) as that was my first Scout Troop in 1951. I have
been searching for this patch for 3 decades so I could complete a
display.
The single 1/2RW is from FONTAINBLEAU, France. This strip
would have been worn by Scouts whose parents served at the
Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). This
HQ was established by General Eisenhower in April 1951 and
discontinued in February 1966 when President de Gaulle decided
to withdraw from NATO.
When I am picking funny and/or unusual town names I often think of
someone responding to the question – Where do you live? Some
of these responses would indeed sound unusual and perhaps even
funny. As readers of this column often ask me if there really is such
a place I have begun trying to locate them and will list their state if
I found it. The names are Corn (OK), Lost Nation (IA), Macks Inn
(ID), Micro (NC), Novelty (MO), Novice (TX), and Science Hill (KY).
Contributors for this issue include Duane Fowlks, Rod Gaudreau,
Dan Graham, Karl Henley, John Hoffman, Todd Kelley, Bill Loeble,
Linnie McClellan, Kevin Rudesill, and C. Schebler.
12
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
WAY BACK WHEN
Franklin D. Roosevelt
“The Amiable Boy Scout”
When Pulitzer
Prize-winning
political
comBy
mentator Walter
David Scott
Lippman
deISCA #5425L
scribed Franklin
[email protected]
D. Roosevelt as
“a kind of amiable Boy Scout,” the United States was deep
in the Great Depression. Elected in November 1932 on the promise of a “New Deal”
to put Americans back to work, Roosevelt’s
programs included the National Recovery
Administration (NRA) designed to regulate
fair pricing practices, the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the Civil Works Administration (CWA), both of which created
temporary manual labor jobs for unskilled
workers.
York City Mayor John Francis Hylan. Then
the Scouts set off on an all-day trip up the
Hudson River to Bear Mountain Scout Camp
for selected Scouts, Scout officials, and
friends of the Movement, to inspect eighteen
camps serving 2,100 local Boy Scouts.
To get there, Roosevelt’s volunteers
chartered the largest boat in the “White
Fleet” of the Hudson Navigation Company.
Upon docking, the contingent walked up
to the Bear Mountain camp. Leading the
reception committee was Roosevelt himself
with Chief Scout Executive James E. West,
BSA Executive Board member George
D. Pratt, and the New York Evening Mail
Publisher Henry L. Stoddard.
Lippman may have recognized Roosevelt’s Scoutlike demeanor
and generally affable personality, but he also recognized that New
Deal back-to-work programs resembled a series of BSA service
projects. The CWA, where formerly unemployed men and women
would “shovel snow, rake leaves, and clean up national parks
through the winter,” may
have been short-lived, but
it was effective at putting His life and his work are
paychecks in the hands
of struggling American
workers at least for as long
as it was in existence.
Throughout the day full of speeches,
parades, demonstrations of knot-tying, a
fried chicken dinner, and bonfires, Chairman Roosevelt “led his
guests around the camp, hiking through campsites, talking about
their Scouting activities, and showing off the numerous teepee
tents resting on built-up wooden platforms.”
After a wonderful and
successful day, Roosevelt
an inspiration to all of us. departed for New York City,
and then, one week later,
– Winston S. Churchill, ca. 1955
for the family vacation
home on Campobello
Island in New Brunswick,
Canada, just over the American border. But at Campobello
Maybe Roosevelt’s years of exposure to BSA’s core values and tragedy struck.
ideals influenced the development of the programs: from 1921
Soon after arriving, Roosevelt greeted his five children with
on he was a consummate Scouting volunteer.
an afternoon of activities, including a cruise on his sailing
boat in the Bay of Fundy. Strangely, he began to show poor
**
muscle coordination, suddenly slipping off the side of the boat.
Having enjoyed considerable success in New York State politics, Undaunted, Roosevelt returned to the house and retired for the
Franklin Roosevelt was jolted by defeat in 1920 as the vice evening.
presidential running mate of Democratic presidential candidate
James M. Cox, the sitting governor of Ohio. Witnessing the The next morning, he felt strange. An odd chill ran through his
growth of a relatively new organization for youth, Roosevelt body, regardless of whether he was in motion or sitting, and he
accepted an offer to expand the Scouting program in his home felt extremely tired. Then when Roosevelt awoke the following
day, he was unable to walk - his left leg buckled under him - and
state as the chairman of the Scout Committee of New York City.
he was running a fever of 102 degrees Fahrenheit. Roosevelt
Assigned to organize any and all program activities in the City, unknowingly had contracted the poliomyelitis virus, known then
Roosevelt threw himself into this volunteer work. Scouting had as infantile paralysis, today as polio. His life had changed forever.
put on a war effort that President Woodrow Wilson described
**
as “splendid.” Roosevelt sought to expand its local reach and in
1921 organized a large celebration in New York City called the
The following years would greatly try his spirit as he struggled to
“Water Hike.”
accept his disability and life in a wheelchair. Though it was not
nd
With some 5,000 Scouts taking part, festivities began with a visit easy, the future 32 president of the United States maintained
to the General Grant National Memorial in Manhattan – better his association with BSA by continuing to do volunteer work as
known as Grant’s Tomb - and a parade review led by New president of the Boy Scout Foundation of Greater New York and
helping found the Ten Mile River Scout Camp.
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
13
Roosevelt re-entered politics in dramatic fashion during the 1928
Democratic National Convention. Selected to nominate “Happy
Warrior” Alfred E. Smith as the nominee for president against
Republican Herbert Hoover, Roosevelt decided he would walk
to the podium at all cost. With help from his son Elliott, he did
just that –with smiles and waves to distract the attention of
convention-goers and the press from missteps.
That year, Roosevelt was elected 44th governor of New York,
setting the stage for his eventual run for the presidency against
Hoover four years later. His courage and devoted service to
Scouting led to his receipt of the 46th Silver Buffalo Award in 1930
– the same year President Hoover was so honored.
**
At Roosevelt’s Inaugural celebration on March 4, 1933, the
president-elect requested four specially selected Eagle Scouts
to be with him in the reviewing stand as well as “on the plaza in
front of the Capitol. The proud Chief Scout Executive James E.
West sent that news item to all the council presidents throughout
the country. And he tried to live Scouting’s principles of inclusion
throughout his presidency.
While the nation’s chief executive, Roosevelt appointed the
first Jewish Secretary of the Treasury in the person of Henry
Morganthau Jr., the son of the prominent New York real estate
mogul and diplomat. One of his most significant contributions
was to formulate the sale and marketing of war bonds to finance
America’s entry into World War II.
In July 1938, Roosevelt nominated another man of Jewish faith,
jurist Felix Frankfurter, to the position of associate justice of the
U.S. Supreme Court. Frankfurter was known for his assistance
in founding the American Civil Liberties Union. As a religious
group, 15% of President Roosevelt’s high office appointments
practiced Judaism when compared with only 3% of the American
population at the time.
On June 25, 1941, Roosevelt signed Executive Order 8802 that
created the Fair Employment Practices Committee, which was
regarded as one of the most important pieces of legislation for
civil rights for African Americans since the end of the Civil War
and the Reconstruction period. Declaring racial discrimination in
the defense industry as patently illegal, it was the first piece of
federal action that promoted equal opportunity in the workplace.
“There is evidence available that needed workers have been
barred from industries engaged in defense production solely
because of considerations of race, creed, color or national origin,
to the detriment of workers’ morale and of national unity,” it
read, “I do hereby reaffirm the policy of the United States that
there shall be no discrimination in the employment of workers
in defense industries or government because of race, creed,
color, or national origin, and I do hereby declare that it is the
duty of employers and of labor organizations, in furtherance of
said policy and of this order, to provide for the full and equitable
participation of all workers in defense industries, without
discrimination because of race, creed, color, or national origin.”
As president, Roosevelt supported BSA through an annual radio
“Fireside Chat” in celebration of Scouting’s birthday. Nearly every
February during his Administration, Roosevelt offered his glowing
congratulations for the accomplishments of Scouting and best
wishes for the continuation of America’s most successful youth
development organization.
President Roosevelt with Scouts
14
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
“I hope that the people who are listening to my voice will give
careful heed to this Scout Oath,” Roosevelt told the nation in
February 1935. “It is the basis of good citizenship.”
A few months later Roosevelt and Washington prepared to
open their doors to the national and international delegates
set to represent worldwide Scouting during BSA’s 1st National
Jamboree. But polio contagion fears obliged the cancelation of
the event, which was rescheduled for the summer of 1937.
**
That summer Washington was abuzz with activity. From June
30 through July 9, by Presidential
invitation, the capital hosted 25,000
Scouts who descended on the city in
celebration of youth and leadership.
owners knew the service work Scouts performed was valuable
to the country. So, thousands of posters went up in storefronts
nationally for military recruiting and material collection drives.
Every two weeks, new posters went out to replace the old ones
with Scouts leading the charge.
Among other projects, Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts led drives to
collect aluminum and other scrap metals, waste paper, clothing
and rubber. They planted trees and tended gardens. They served
as messengers and dispatch bearers, sold Defense Bonds and
Stamps, and collected musical instruments for servicemen in
Army camps.
As reported in the official history
of the event, at the base of the
Washington Monument, “Scouts
from everywhere met each other all
together for the first thrill of such a
meeting.”
Two days before the Jamboree
ended, on July 7, organizers staged
a parade that included President
Roosevelt himself, Chief Scout
Executive James E. West, and
National Scout Commissioner Dan
Beard, escorted by selected Eagle
Scouts. All three greeted the throngs
of Scouts, Scouters, and visitors
from the back seat of their open-air
vehicle.
Roosevelt, in a light colored jacket
and white hat, reveled in the event.
Unknown Eagle Scout, President Roosevelt, James E. West, Chief Scout ExHis participation launched a tradition
ecutive, and Daniel Carter Beard, BSA National Scout Commissioner, at the
that continues today – formal
1937 National Jamboree.
recognition of the BSA National
Jamboree
through
presidential
Though President Roosevelt did not live to see the end of
communication or personal attendance.
World War II, he witnessed first-hand the power of the Scouting
The year 1942 brought a new set of challenges that BSA had
Movement. “I have always been a staunch believer in Scouting,”
not experienced since 1917 – supporting a national war effort.
he declared in 1943. “Now, in time of war, as your honorary
In response to Japan’s bombing of Pearl Harbor in December
president, I urge everyone connected with Scouting, boys and
1941, Roosevelt called on Americans to work together for
men, to see to it that Scouting is maintained at its full strength
victory. Eagerly coming to the aid of the country were 1.5 million
and effectiveness as a practical contribution to the war effort.”
Cub and Boy Scouts. West pledged to Roosevelt “the full and
BSA was entering its golden age.
whole-hearted co-operation of our organization.”
Once again, BSA became the primary means of distribution of
leaflets and posters for the Office of War Information Department.
No one knew their communities better than the legions of local
Boy Scouts. They were clean-cut and polite, and business
Copyright 2013 by David C. Scott. Dave also is the author of the nationally awardwinning book, The Scouting Party (Red Honor Press, 2010) and We Are Americans,
We Are Scouts (Red Honor Press, 2008). Currently he is authoring the official
centennial anniversary book for the Circle Ten Council in Dallas, Texas. He can be
contacted at [email protected].
Interesting Facts and Figures
Chief Scout Executives
BSA National Presidents
National Jamboree Attendance (as of 2005)
Scouts who have become astronauts
Norman Rockwell works with Scouting themes
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
11
33
642,489
181
51
15
Joseph Csatari works with Scouting themes
Scouts who have attended Northern Tier
Scouts who have attended Philmont
Scouts who have attended Florida Sea Base
36
348,642
908,047
200,000
Source: www.scouting.org
World Jamboree Connections
1933 World Jamboree
Balloon Connections
The 1933 World Jamboree, held 80 years
ago, for its time was one of the most
progressive Jamborees with its various
activities and insignia. Held in Gödöllö
By
Hungary, only 406 participants from the
Neil W. Larsen
United States of America attended this
ISCA #0086L
very successful event. Many items were
[email protected]
available during the Jamboree, but one
of the most unusual was the balloon pin
sponsored by the Hutter-Lever Soap Company. The company was part of
the British soap company Lever Brothers. The Lever Brothers company
had recently bought into the Hutter soap company of Budapest. During
the Jamboree as the Jamboree Newspaper
article describes, less than one third of
the Scouts were given the opportunity
to place their name on a balloon and
release it. A Scout was given a metal
pin (bove) to recognize participation
in this event. The soap company
gave prizes for the balloons that
were reported to have traveled
the greatest distance. We don’t
know what the prizes were, but the
prevailing winds should have carried
the balloons to the east. The brass pin
was 42 mm in diameter.
After World War II Scouting was prohibited in Eastern Europe. With the
end of the “Cold War” in 1989, Scouting began to come back in Eastern
Europe and the old jamboree memorabilia came out of storage. Over
the last decade many difficult to find pre-1947 World Jamboree items
have been made available, including this wonderful balloon activity pin,
but most collectors do not know about the origins of the pin.
German World Jamboree
Contingent Badges
In the December 2012 Journal, the images of the German Contingent Badges were inadvertently omitted. For more detailed
descriptions, please see page 29 of the December Journal.
1963
1957
1995
1967
1999
1975
1971
2003
Article translation
ABC balloon competition at the Jamboree
35 thousand pairs of scout-eyes will be searching the
sky today, on Tuesday p.m. on 8th (of the month), if
under good weather conditions, full of excitement this
afternoon. All hoping that it will be this balloon out of
the other 10.000 colorful ones which makes the longest
journey in the air. All the balloons will be advertising
the perfection of the Hutter ABC Soap. Each balloon
will have a small note posted on it with the name of
the team and the scout whose hand let it fly away. If
you happen to find one of the balloons please take the
note off, and with your name and address drop it to the
nearest mailbox. The owners, just like the finders of the
balloons from the biggest distance will be awarded.
-Hungarian translation by Tamas Farkas
1983
2007
16
1987
1991
2011
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
OA News
New Michigan Flaps
Two more of the new Michigan
lodges have issued flaps. The
By
first we saw were from Kishahtek
Dave Minnihan Lodge (88?) of the new Southern
Shores Field Service Council,
ISCA # 0018L
formed by the joining of Manitous
[email protected]
Lodge 88 (Great Sauk Trail Council)
and Nacha Mawat Lodge 373
(Southwest Michigan Council). We
understand that this lodge issued
two flaps simultaneously, a standard
uniform flap and a charter member
flap. Roy More, a lodge member, told
us he had seen a message from the
lodge advisor saying that the lodge
would consider the standard uniform
flap to be their first flap.
We have learned that the name Kishahtek can be translated
to “Northern Lights.” The totem of the new lodge is the Wolverine.
Later we saw flaps from Nataepu Shohpe Lodge (President
Ford Field Service Council) appear on eBay. This lodge was
formed by the joining of Nacha Tindey Lodge 25 (Gerald R. Ford
Council) and Indian Drum Lodge 152 (Scenic Trails Council).
The first one we saw sell on eBay brought a winning bid of $30.
Rich Turner sent us images of new flaps from Nentego Lodge
20 that note their council’s camps. The first for Rodney Scout
Reservation also says “Cheerful.” The second for Henson Scout
Reservation says “Brotherhood.” Henson is the new name for
Nanticoke SR, changed to honor a large donation. The third flap
is for the council’s new camp, Akridge Scout Reservation, and it
says “Service.” Each of these three flaps was issued at a lodge
weekend event.
Akridge SR is the first in-state camp for this council. Delaware
was thought to be the last state in the nation without a current
in-state camp. A separate flap was issued for the council’s 2012
Jamboree to mark the creation of the camp. Rich tells us the
camp is not actually open yet, with only three pavilions up, a lake,
and some signs.
Rich also reported to us that Nentego has issued two flaps to
support the Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition. The pink nonmylar flap had 250 made and sold for $5. A pink mylar flap had
100 made and sold for $25. One mylar flap was presented to
the breast cancer group and one was preserved in the lodge
collection.
A Kiminschi Lodge 542 F1 flap, unused but lightly stained, was
offered on eBay for $3,149 but drew no bid. The seller suggested
that a buyer could clean the stain and get a great badge at a
bargain price, but no one took on that opportunity. It was later
offered at reduced price but still no taker. The example of this
badge in the Dave Thomas collection was priced at $4,000.
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
17
A nearly complete collection of
badges from Nahak Lodge 526
By
was offered on eBay in October and
sold for $3,296. The seller said the
Bruce Shelley
collection was missing the S3, N1A,
ISCA # 0054L
and ZR1. The F1, a rarity 10 first
[email protected]
flap, had been sewn on the seller’s
shirt but remained relatively stiff.
The mint F1 in the Thomas collection
was priced at $4,750.
Also in October an un-cataloged
neckerchief from Seminole Lodge
85 appeared on eBay and sold for
$549. The neckerchief looked like
red cotton cloth with a white design
painted or inked with a stencil. In a round
circle a Native American was presented in profile.
Around the edge of the circle read the text “Seminole Lodge
85 WWW.” Rick Obermeyer wrote us about it and said an older
member of the lodge thinks he may have seen it before but
cannot place it. Two lodge chiefs from the 1960’s are not familiar
with it, suggesting it may date to before that decade.
The Manitous Lodge 88 S41 flap looks like a farewell flap. The
dates 1994-2012 mark the lodge’s existence, but all of the fires
on the ceremonial wheel appear to be extinguished or going out.
Rick Obermeyer of Tipisa Lodge 326 loaned us two unusual
insignia items. The first is a standard flap with sound system
attached to the back. When the center back of the flap is pushed,
it plays several measures of the OA Song. That’s loud and
startling if you aren’t expecting it (the voice of experience). Rick
tells us the song is normally sung slowly, like a hymn, but his
lodge sings it in a march tempo. It took a while for the lodge to
find a brisk version of the “Imperial Russian National Anthem,”
which is the tune of the OA Song.
The second item is large flap shaped pin made of several layers
of colored rubber. This makes a very colorful piece. Tipisa gives
a tip of the hat to Coosa Lodge 50 for the idea of a rubber flapshaped pin. Tipisa considers it a novelty pin, not a flap issue. It
is too small for uniform wear and comes with two clutch pins on
the back, making it suitable for wear on hats, jackets, or even
t-shirts. They plan to recommend that their Elangomats wear
them on t-shirts, for example.
Moswetuset Lodge 52 has issued 6 two-piece sets in
remembrance of its six predecessor lodges. These six lodges
were merged or absorbed to create Moswetuset 52. Each set
has a new Moswetuset flap and a chevron piece that shows the
name, totem, and dates of existence of one predecessor:
• Missituck Lodge 261, 1944-1958
• Menetomi Lodge 396, 1953-1958
• Souhegan Lodge 447, 1951-1958
• Kahagon Lodge 131, 1938-2000
• Taskiagi Lodge 261, 1958-1993
• King Philip Lodge, 1941-1993
We are guessing these sets are also marking Moswetuset’s
20th anniversary. Regardless, if you collect New England,
Massachusetts, or this lodge, you have 12 new needs.
A handmade felt badge described as being an Order of the
Rising Sun pre-OA society badge from Camp Baiting Hollow
sold on eBay in early November for $178. There was only one
bid at the minimum. The seller referenced the USScouts.org
honor society web page.
Charlie Davis traded us the farewell flap from White Horse
Lodge 21, soon to be merging with Talligewi Lodge 62. The flap
carries a striking design representing the “end of the trail.” It also
includes a red arrow metal pin attached with a rivet through the
back of the flap. We had not seen that done before with a rivet.
Charlie tells us the name of the new lodge to be formed is
Nguttitehen, pronounced “Goo-te-tay’-en.
Charles Jaxel reported on Patch-L that the new council formed
by the merger of Burlington County (Hunnikick Lodge 76) and
Southern New Jersey (Te’Kening Lodge 37) will be Garden
State Council, beginning January 1, 2013. Both OA lodges are
expected to carry on for 2013, with a new lodge to be formed
by 1/1/2014. They originally selected South Jersey Council as
the new name, but that was rejected by National because it had
been used before.
Ohlone Lodge 63 has been issuing flaps for its Northern California
Trade-O-Ree since 2008. For 2012 the flap incorporated the
leaping salmon from Mayi Lodge 354, a predecessor, in the
design. Previous trade-o-ree flaps used designs from Canaku
Lodge 511 (2011) and Pomponio Lodge 528 (2009). All of
these might be considered event flaps, not regular issues.
Trey Walls of Tonkawa Lodge 99 shared some information on
recent patches they have issued. The small NOAC 2012 pine
cone badge was given out by members at their Founder’s Day
booth. The pine cone was also used in the design their delegate
two-piece set. That set also represented the old cabin from their
former camp, Camp Tom Wooten. The pine trees are a symbol
of their new camp, Lost Pines SR. Their 75th anniversary flap
incorporates the Texas state flag into its background.
A question was raised on Patch-L about whether the act of
merging away has a significantly positive effect on the value
of badges of the now gone lodge. The response seemed to be
that the values depended mainly on how hard the old patches
were to begin with. One person commented on how common
the flaps from San Gorgonio Lodge 298 and Ahwahnee Lodge
430 were before they merged 40+ years ago, and that the value
of those flaps remains fairly low even now. He also pointed out
an eBay sale in October of a lot of 11 flaps for $73. Of the 11, 6
were from merged lodges, including Swatara Lodge 39, Wapsu
Achtu Lodge 343, and Shingis Lodge 497. There was a time
not long ago when a 497s1 would have commanded that value
by itself.
We are encouraged to see new traders getting engaged on
Facebook and elsewhere, but they seem primarily interested in
new issues. When offered a choice between nice older issues or
new, they seem to prefer the new. There also seems to be more
interest in active lodges, than merged ones.
In December a pair of flap varieties, the S9a and S9b from
Tsisqan Lodge 253, sold on eBay for $770 after 78 bids. There
were five main bidders, with one dropping out at $290, a second
dropping at $550, and the other non-winners giving up near the
winning bid. The winner entered two additional bids above the
one that actually won the lot, suggesting he or she was willing to
go much higher.
Data analysis on these varieties available to members on
oaimages.com does not seem to separate information for the
two. It shows four price points for the S9a up to December 2008.
It shows three price points for the S9b but these are identical to
three of those shown for the first variety. One of these varieties
is apparently very rare and several collectors had a strong desire
to own it.
Blue Book research for lodge names relied upon information
of all types, but the weightiest and most valuable information
was actual lodge documentation. An example of reliable lodge
documentation popped up on eBay in January. This was a
Vigil Honor certificate of membership from Yaqui Lodge 138,
dated September 23rd, 1956. The Blue Book notes this lodge
was chartered in 1938 and merged with Checote Lodge 154 in
1957 to form Daw-Zu Lodge 138. As we submitted this article
for publication, the certificate was bid up to $156 with over a day
to go.
Peter Glass reported on Patch-L that the 2013 Jamboree patches
for Old Colony Council and Tisquantum Lodge 164 are being
designed by Jeff Kinney, author of “Diary of a Wimpy Kid.” Mr.
Kinney also designed the lodge’s badges for the 2012 NOAC.
Stephen White sent us images of three Jamboree 2013 two-piece
sets that Illinek Lodge 132 issued on January 13. The three
sets go together to form a scene of a railroad bridge going from
morning, then noon, and on to night. The pocket pieces come
with button loops. The first set is for their council contingent troop
239. The second set shows the lodge insignia and is intended
for trading. The third set is for members on staff. The white stars
and moon on the third set are glow-in-the dark. They made 300
of each set and they will be sold initially only together. Closer to
the Jamboree they will consider a reorder of the contingent set
for those wanting more trading stock.
Just before our submission date in January, Gene Berman sent
out a message about the transition of the five lodges in New York
City merging together. The new lodge is to be named Kintecoying
Lodge 4, with the name interpreted to mean “Crossroads of
Nations.” Astor Place in the city used to be named Kintecoying
and was a powwow point for the Lenape tribes of Manhattan. At
this spot where trails converged the Lenapes traded, exchanged
news, held spiritual ceremonies, and tribal councils. The name
also refers to the modern city as a cultural melting pot, and a
global trade and financial hub.
The new lodge will use the number 4 in reference to the 93 year
history of the Order in the city. The lodge totem is the peregrine
falcon, symbol of strength and a bird native to New York City,
where it can be found nesting on bridges and skyscrapers.
The first flap is being designed by a contest and the winning entry
will be unveiled at the lodge’s “Day One” event April 13, 2013.
Last time we described a NOAC 2012 flap from Woapalanne
Lodge 43 and listed it as the S22. Frank Caccavale wrote to
correct us, saying that flap was their s28. Our error illustrates the
18
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
lack of information we all have to deal with at times.
We have been asked to provide catalog numbers for new issues
when we describe them. If possible we ask people from whom
we get an image or badge to give us the catalog number, but
usually they don’t know. We fall back on trying to extrapolate a
Blue Book catalog number from what we can see on oaimages.
com or from the online Blue Book. In this particular case, Frank
tells us that oaimages.com was missing 8 of his lodge’s flaps.
Don’t take our catalog numbers as the final word. They are just
our best estimate at the time of submission.
We were thinking about side or alternative OA collections and
came up this one. Does anyone collect national OA by membership
card, one card from each lodge? If so, we like to hear how that is
going. Another might be OA lodges by neckerchief slide. It seems
like many, if not most, OA lodges existing prior to the 1990 have
at least one neckerchief slide associated with them.
Quick comments:
•
•
The Eswau Huppeday Lodge 560s60 flap for the
2012 Dixie fellowship seems to show a silhouette of
Sasquatch walking among the trees in the night scene.
What looks like a new flap from Quapaw Lodge 160
has the number “413” on a setting sun and a Native
American on horseback raising a pipe in salute to the
sun, all possibly in reference to the absorption of Hi’lo
Ha Chy’a-la Lodge 413.
•
David Miura shared on Patch-L news that Chehaw
(Immokalee Lodge 353) and Alapaha Area (Alapaha
Lodge 545) Councils had merged on November 1 to
form South Georgia Council.
•
The last three flaps in Gila Lodge 378’s Zodiac
series were striking badges portraying a tarantula, an
antelope, and a bear.
•
As of January 12 on eBay there were 79,964 active
listings of Boy Scout memorabilia; of these 10,889 were
auctions.
The following badges did not sell on e-Bay when there were no
bids at the seller’s minimum, which we list.
•
22s1 $174 FF ($292)
•
20f1 $460 FF ($490)
•
195r1 Ma-Ta-Cam $19,899
•
278a1 $4500
•
440s1 $90 FF ($300)
•
454f1b $723 (F1a $1300)
•
542f1 Kiminschi soiled $2520 ($4000)
9eF1 Cowaw $546 FF ($700)
•
69f1a $419 FF ($450)
•
118s1 1,0011 FF ($810)
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
158s1 $175 FF ($382)
•
168a1 chain stitch on felt $1,136
•
226f1 Man soiled $235 ($783)
•
265f1 sewn $500 FF ($834)
•
281x1 $531
•
299s2 $196
•
309s1 The Grand $262 FF ($359)
•
311f1 Es Kaielgu $72 FF ($146)
•
313f1 Bis worn $537 FF ($1127)
•
406r1 $325
•
333f1 $119, $82 FF ($296)
•
337f1 cut down; worn? $887 FF ($3900)
•
415f1 soil; ink on back $358 FF ($749)
•
424s1 wees $76 FF ($41)
•
427f1 soiled $270 FF ($278)
•
461f1a $148 FF ($325)
•
465f1 $135 FF ($285)
•
470f1 $989 FF ($1250)
•
472f1 $80 FF ($119)
•
474s2 $409
•
491f1 Tunxis $340 FF ($400)
•
532f2 worn with rust spot $989
Please drop us a note with news or stories that you think would
be of interest to other collectors. If you have information from
your Lodge or Section to share, send an e-mail, photocopies
(with descriptions, catalog numbers, and preferably in color), or
scan to either of us. You reach Dave at dave.minnihan@gmail.
com or Bruce at [email protected]. For publication we
require black & white TIFF images of new badges scanned at
300 dots per inch (DPI), reduced 50%. We will trade for new
issues if you wish.
Contributors: Jason Ricker, Trey Walls, Nick DeMarco,
Charlie Davis, John Kennedy, Paul McNally, Gene Cobb, John
Rauenbueler, Ed Basar, Dan Gille, Jerry Lutz, Mike Heitke, Rick
Obermeyer, Matt Schieferstein, Bruce Paulson, Rich Turner, and
Mike Conkey.
New Issues
Here is a list OA badges of note that changed hands recently in
eBay auctions. Figures in parentheses are the prices asked for
the Dave Thomas first flap (FF) collection.
•
•
19
7s45 Blk R MC Wht Wht Fdls; new standard flap
12s26 Gmy R Mar Gmy Gmy Fdl; “1922-2012”
12s27 Gmy R Mar Gmy Gmy Fdl; NOAC 2012
13s50 Ror R MC Ror Ror Fdl; sunset at ocean pier
13s51 Gmy R MC Wht Blu Fdl; raised cog;
“Wischixin Award”; earned
20s60 Red R Wht Blk Blk Fdl; “Cheerful/
Rodney Scout Reservation”
20s61 Red R Wht Blk Blk Fdl; “Brotherhood/
Henson Scout Reservation”
20s62 Red R Wht Blk Blk Fdl; “Service/
Akridge Scout Reservation”
20s63 Pnk R Pnk Pnk Pnk Fdl; pink ribbon
20s64 Pmy R Pmy Pmy Pmy Fdl; Pmy ribbon
45s34 Dyl R MC Blk Blk Fdl; the one tree
57s2 Blk R Org Blk Blk Fdl; trader;
“Conclave 2012 NE-4B”
88s41 Blk R MC Blk Dgr Fdl; “1994-2012”
(88)s1 Blk R MC Blk Dgr Fdl
(88)s2 Kishahtek Blk R MC Pnk Blk Fdl;
Gmy “Charter Member”; first flap?
99s52 Gry R MC MC Wht Fdl: “1937 2012”
99x24 Pur R MC Wht Pur Fdl; “75 Years …”
99x26 Blk C MC Red __; pine cone;
NOAC 2012 Founder’s Day gift
110s48 Wht R MC Yel Wht Fdl; BRO
110s49 Yel R MC Yel Wht Fdl; VIG
132s45 Blk C Lbl Blk Lbl Fdl; JAM13
132x13 Blk C MC Blk Olv Fdl; JAM13; Troop 239
132s46 Blk C Lpu Blk Lpu Fdl; JAM13
132x14 Blk C MC Blk Lpu Fdl; JAM13
132s47 Blk C Dgy Blk Dgy Fdl; JAM13
132x15 Blk C MC Blk Lol Fdl; JAM13; Staff
146s21 Rmy R Tur Blk Gmy Fdl; 5th Ann
146s23 Ror R Grn Blk Grn Fdl; OBV
146s26 Org R Blk Org Yel Fdl
160s49 Blk R MC Blk __; “413” on setting sun
164s60 Wht R MC Blk Blk Fdl
167s47 Wht R Wht Wht Wht Fdl; VIG “2012”
193f10 Blu R Wht Blk Wht Fdl; “Conclave 2012”
196s9 Yel R MC Yel Yel BSA; JAM10; BSA 100th
196s10 Yel R Blk Yel Blk Fdl
201s56 Brmy R MC Yel Org Fdl; “1996-2012”
231s67 Blk C MC Yel Yel Fdl
231x35 Blk C MC Red Red Fdl;
“Farewell 1943 2012”
237s108 Blk R M/C Grn Grn Fdl; 70th Ann
280s18 Blk R MC Dyl Red Fdl
312s50 Smy R MC Red Gry Fdl
313s48 Grn R M/C Red Red Fdl; NOAC 2012
Joint issue with 427 and 553
360s41 Blu R M/C Blk Yel Fdl; 65th Ann
378s84 Blk R MC Yel Yel Fdl; night scene
“Leroy Hufford Founder”
378s85 Blk R MC Yel Yel Fdl; sunset
“Jake Ross Founder”
378s86 Blk R MC Org Org Fdl; tarantula
378s87 Dyl R MC Blk Wht Fdl; antelope
378s88 Blk R MC Org Wht Fdl; bear
378x20 Blk C MC MC Blk Fdl; demon head
393s22 Yel R Blu Wht Wht BSA; vert bkgd
422s58 Blk R MC Tan Grn Fdl
533s35 Blk R Blk Red Blk Fdl
560s60 Blk R M/C Wht Wht Fdl; Dixie 2012
7s45
12s26
12s27
13s50
20s60
20s61
20s62
20s63
20s64
45s34
88s41
99s52
99x24
99x26
110s48
20
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
132s45 / 132x13
146s21
193f10
132s46 / 132x14
132s47 / 132x15
146s23
146s26
196s10
201s56
378s88
378s84
422s58
Order of the Rising Sun
231s67
560s60
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
21
Collecting Camp Patches
Rehabilitation For Camp Patches
The term “boxsoil” has been
By
used in our
Bob Sherman hobby for many
ISCA 0490
years. It refers
[email protected] to the dinginess
and
discoloration that sometimes occurs to
older twill-type patches, usually with white or light-colored
backgrounds. Older camp
and other types of patches are susceptible to this
condition, whether or not
they ever saw the inside
of a box. I am sure it is primarily caused by excessive
handling, exposure to contaminants in the air, age and, I suppose, soiled boxes.
I have an effective treatment for this
condition that I would like to share with my
loyal readers. A while ago, I saw a box
of OxiClean stain-removing powder on my
wife’s laundry shelf. I did an experiment
with an old box-soiled camporee patch as I
did not know what would happen and I did
not want to risk ruining a valuable patch. To make a long story short, the patch
came out almost like new so I tried it with a
few more and it worked like magic.
My regimen is to use a designated plastic
container (the stuff can be toxic to ingest
so I recommend not using a container that
will be used for food in the future), halffill it with hot water from the tap, add a
half scoop of OxiClean to the water – stir
it up with a plastic utensil (also not to be
reused for food), add the soiled patches,
watch it foam up, stir occasionally with the
plastic utensil (my wife calls the contents
of this plastic container “patch stew”) and
after an hour, discard the dirty water, rinse
patches in cold water a few times, lay the
patches on a flat hard surface, cover with
a clean white towel and put weights on top
to press them flat (I found that my wife’s
math textbooks worked very well).
When the patches are dry, they are almost
like new. Here are a few before and after
examples from my most recent batch of
patch stew. I caution everyone to treat
OxiClean carefully and respectfully – I
wear eye protection and rubber gloves
when I work with it as it could be irritating to
the eyes or skin. To date, I have not
tried it on felt patches or camp
patches with metallic thread
as they caution against using
it on some materials. As a
disclaimer, I have no financial
interest in OxiClean. In
my
previous
column, I described
a
chenille
camp
patch and asked if anyone
knew of any others. John
Hoffman of VA wrote that
he has a 1930’s CAMP
UMBSTATTER
chenille
(left) from Allegheny County,
West Council in PA. John’s
is probably the earliest camp
chenille but does anyone have any
others? BTW, the name of the Council is Allegheny County, West (1928-1943).
Kevin Rudesill from WA sent a copy of a
1922 booklet from CAMP HEAP-MUCHFUN owned by Fort Dodge Council in
Iowa. The camp was located in Dolliver
State Park. Kevin has done some
excellent research on many of the earliest
camps from the Northwestern part of the
US and is one of my go-to guys whenever
I have a question about a camp from that
area. Kevin offered me a good tip in doing
early camp research – since the archives
of many newspapers are being posted
electronically on line, it is now possible to
search newspapers from the early years
of Scouting by doing a computer search
for “Boy Scout Camp” or for the local
Council name. Several years ago at a Philadelphia
TOR, I acquired 3 old felt patches from
GREENWOOD CAMP dated 1954, 55
and 56. The 1956 patch said it was the
23rd year of the camp so doing the math
means the camp opened in 1934. The
person I received them from did not know
anything about them or even if they were
BSA camps. I knew Detroit Area Council
had a Camp Greenwood so I assumed
they were from there. However, with
the help of David Fry of PA, I was able
to make a positive ID. They are from
Appalachian Trail Council (1941-1970) in
PA. Larry has a 1937 felt patch that he
received from a Scoutmaster in his town
that went to Greenwood as a Scout. He
22
also sent me a copy of a publication
from the late 1930’s that
describes Camp Greenwood
as being affiliated with
Schuylkill (County) Council
(1930-1941), the predecessor
of Appalachian Trail Council. Larry said that the camp was
actually owned by the Lehigh
Coal and Navigation Company
but was used as a summer camp for
Scouts and other groups. Larry’s patch
is a round green felt with a large red felt
G and 37. My
1956 is white felt
with dark green
silkscreening.
Larry Faulkner of
AL is very active
with the restoration
of CAMP TRANQUILITY
that
was
controlled by both the Birmingham Area Council and Black Warrior
Council. It built in 1937 by the WPA and
the CCC and is currently an independent
camp run by Crew 50 and Troop 2 of the
Greater Alabama Council. For more information, you can visit their website at www.
camptranquility.net.
Larry also sent me a scan of a 1942
orange felt arrowhead shaped patch
from SEMINOLE DISTRICT CAMP from
Choctaw Area Council. This
is one of the earliest dated
SSC (Segregated Scout
Camp) patches from the
South. Larry said it
was located on US
Highway 80 near
Toomsuba,
MS,
about 3 miles from
the AL State line.
Doug Henkele from
TX, the webmaster
of my favorite website
campimages.com, sent
a scan of a great old patch. It is a 1916 BLYTHEBURN
BOY SCOUT CAMP patch
from Wilkes-Barre Council (1915-1924)
which was a simple white felt block letter
B. Cynical readers might question this
Continued on Page 24
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
BEFORE AND AFTER REHABILITATION
BEFORE
BEFORE
BEFORE
AFTER
AFTER
AFTER
AFTER
BEFORE
BEFORE
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
AFTER
BEFORE
23
AFTER
ID as the B could have
come from any one of a
hundred camps that began
with the letter B. However,
this patch also came with
a letter written in 1916
on Wilkes-Barre Council
stationary that specifically
identified this patch as
coming from Blytheburn Boy Scout Camp.
I wish every old mystery patch would
come with such great identification. Randy Holden from NJ sent me a scan of
a previously unknown camp that is BSA. It is from CAMP OUANANOCK. A Google
search did not reveal any info on this
camp. Does anyone
recognize
this
camp
name
and can ID
where it is
from?
D i c k
Cordes from
NY sent an
article about
the sale of CAMP
STRAKE
owned
by Sam Houston Council. Apparently
attendance has been dropping at the
camp so the Council’s Executive Board
voted to sell the property and use the
proceeds to purchase at least 1000 acres
in a less-urbanized environment within a 2
hour drive from downtown Houston. They
have plans to build a state-of-the-art camp
for the 21st Century that would include a
skateboard park, BMX bike facility and
STEM (science, technology, energy and
math) center. I wish them well. I much
prefer stories about building a new camp
or improving an existing camp than stories
about selling camp properties.
Mitch Reis from CT sent scans of some
patches that need identification. One
is a red bordered felt round with a red
arrowhead and crossed arrows on a blue
felt background (MP-13-1-1, below). The
others are a set of 3 white on red felts with
an overlapping C and S. One has a 2
and another has a 4 (MP-13-1-2, below). Mitch said they came with other Scout
material.
Rich Shields of NC sent a heavy white
cloth patch with a diamond around the
letters CB (MP-13-1-3, below) that needs
identification. He said it came with some
Del-Mar-Va and Chester County Council
items.
Andy Dubill of KS, a former columnist of
this publication (I miss his column) sent
scans of two patches from one shirt that
he would like to
share with our
readers. The
shirt is from
Wichita,
KS. On one pocket
was a blue and
yellow teepeeshaped felt with
a T and a curved
bar (MP-13-1-4, above). There were three
possibilities to consider from “The Camp
Book II” - Wichita Council (1918-1940)
had 3 camps that began with the letter
T - CAMP TA-WA-KO-NI from 1919-late
1930’s, CAMP TA-WA-SEN-THA from the
1930’s and CAMP TA-LA-HI from 19271935. Apparently, they had a surplus of
hyphens in Wichita back in the 1920’s and
30’s. felt
acorn-shaped
patch that says
“MERRY MEN 24”
(MP-13-1-5, right). I don’t know if there
was a Sherwood
Forest in the Wichita
area. Does anyone
know what this patch
was for?
No column would be complete without a few
Mystery Patches that need identification. Peter Glass from MA sent me a scan of an
orange felt arrowhead with a blue Native
American and a gold metallic star (MP13-1-6). Mike Candell of PA sent purple
felt “O” with a yellow felt teepee inside the
“O” (MP-13-1-7). Mike said it came with
some items from Missouri. The ID card
from 1930 said the Scout was from Slater,
MO so he was wondering if this is an early
Osceola issue. I would like to refer all readers to check
out the “whatsit” section of campimages.
com as there are many potential BSA
camp patches that need an ID. I have
been sending Doug Henkele a number
of scans from my collection that were not
pictured on this site and I would encourage
all readers to do likewise. My goal is to
make this site as comprehensive for camp
patch issues as John Pannell’s site is for
OA issues. Doug has over 20,000 images
on the site so far.
MYSTERY PATCHES
Jim Allman from KS made the ID of this
patch. He reported that in Mike Erickson’s
book “Boy Scout Camps of South-Central
Kansas”, the teepee shaped patch is
from CAMP TA-WA-KO-NI near Augusta,
KS circa 1937. The one line under the T
indicates this was a first-year camper.
The other patch was on the sleeve of
Andy’s shirt and was a black and orange
MP-13-1-6
MP-13-1-3
MP-13-1-1
MP-13-1-2
MP-13-1-7
24
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
CSP CORNER
More Mergers News
Thought I would do a Council merger update column this time for everyone – including which ones have
issued new CSPs:
By
Steve Austin
ISCA # 0080
[email protected]
Merger Talks that have been called off: (1) San Francisco Bay Area & Mt. Diablo Silverado (2) Marin
& Redwood Empire
Merger Talks still in discussion: (1) Los Angeles and Western Los Angeles (2) San Gabriel Valley &
Verdugo Hills
Mergers Approved – CSPs being designed as of 1/11/13: (1) Alapaha & Chehaw merged to form South Georgia Council (2)
Burlington County & Southern New Jersey merged to form Garden State Council (3)Santa Clara County & Monterey Bay merged
to form Silicon Valley Monterey Bay Council
New Council Names – CSPs issued in 2011 and 2012: (1) Laurel Highlands (2) Michigan Crossroads (a) Water & Woods FSC
(Field Service Council of Michigan Crossroads), (b) Southern Shores FSC (Field Service Council of Michigan Crossroads) (3) Texas
Southwest (4) Three Harbors
NEW ISSUES
Council
Allegheny Highlands
Allegheny Highlands
Allegheny Highlands
Allegheny Highlands
Allegheny Highlands
Andrew Jackson
Andrew Jackson
Annawon
Arbuckle Area
Arbuckle Area
Baden-Powell
Baltimore Area
Issue #
SA-113
SA-114
SA-115
S-116
SA-117
T-22
T-23
SA-29
SA-20
SA-21
SA-11:1
SA-177
Border
BRN
BLU
SIL/M
RED
WHT
SIL/M
GLD/M
SIL/M
BLK
GLD/M
RED
WHT
Sky/Bkg
BLK
BLK
BLK
BLU
LT BLU
BLK
BLK
R/W/B
WHT
WHT
WHT
RED/BLU
FDL
YEL
YEL
YEL
GRY
BRN
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
GLD/M
RED
TAN
WHT
Name
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
BRN
RED
RED
GRY
RED
RED
GRY
WHT
Baltimore Area
SA-178
SIL/M
RED/BLU
RED
TAN
WHT
WHT
Baltimore Area
Baltimore Area
Baltimore Area
Baltimore Area
Baltimore Area
SA-179
SA-180
SA-181
SA-182
SA-183
RED
RED
RED
RED
YEL
GLD
GLD
YEL
YEL
YEL
GLD
GLD
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
YEL
Baltimore Area
SA-184
BLU
GRN
GRN
WHT
Baltimore Area
SA-185
BLU
GRY
GRY
WHT
Baltimore Area
SA-186
GRN
BLU
BRN
WHT
Baltimore Area
Baltimore Area
SA-187
SA-188
SIL/M
GLD/M
BLU
BLU
BRN
BRN
WHT
WHT
Baltimore Area
SA-189
GRN
GRN
GRN
GRN
Baltimore Area
SA-190
GLD/M
PUR
R/W/B
GLD/M
Baltimore Area
SA-191
PUR
WHT
WHT
GLD/M
Baltimore Area
SA-192
BLK
WHT
WHT
PUR
Bay Area
Black Swamp Area
Black Swamp Area
Black Swamp Area
Black Swamp Area
Black Swamp Area
Blackhawk Area
SA-24
SA-17:1
SA-22:1
SA-23:1
SA-24:1
SA-27
SA-22:1
YEL
BLK
BLU
GRN
BLK
GRY
SIL/M
R/W/B
BLU
RED
PUR
YEL
LT BLU
LT BLU
GLD PIN
YEL
YEL
BLK
WHT
WHT
RED
BLK
BLU
Blue Grass
Blue Grass
Blue Ridge Mountains
Blue Ridge Mountains
Blue Ridge Mountains
SA-50:1
SA-54
SA-62
SA-63
SA-64
RED
BLK
BLU
RED
GLD/M
BLU
RED/ORG
LT BLU
R/W/B
R/W/B
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
SE
BSA
YEL
BLK
WHT
BLU
GRN
BLK
GRY
BLK
WHT
YEL
YEL
25
WHT
BLU
YEL
YEL
YEL
Issue Description
"Elk Lick Merz, Earn Your Way to Camp, 2012"
"Elk Lick Merz, Earn Your Way to Camp, 2012"
"Elk Lick Merz, Earn Your Way to Camp, 2012"
Regular wear issue
"Zimmer Health Lodge, Elk Lick Scout Reserve"
"260 WWW"
"260 WWW"
"Once an Eagle Always an Eagle, Eagle Scout"
"2012 NOAC"
"2012 NOAC"
"A Scout is Trustworthy, FOS 1999", $100 DN
"NYLT 2012, National Youth Leadership Training",
participant issue
"NYLT 2012, National Youth Leadership Training",
staff issue
"Spring 2012, N5-220-12-1, Wood Badge"
"Spring 2012, N5-220-12-1, Wood Badge, Staff"
"Spring 2012, N5-220-12-1, Wood Badge"
"Spring 2012, N5-220-12-1, Wood Badge, Staff"
"Spring 2012, N5-220-12-1, Wood Badge", West
Award for Scoutmaster
"33rd Scottish Jamborette - Blair Atholl, 2012",
participant issue
"33rd Scottish Jamborette - Blair Atholl, 2012", staff
issue
"Fall 2012, Wood badge, N5-220-12-2", participant
issue
"Fall 2012, Wood badge, N5-220-12-2", staff issue
"Fall 2012, Wood badge, N5-220-12-2", Scoutmaster
issue
"Fall 2012, Wood badge, N5-220-12-2", james E West
Fellow Scoutmaster issue
"2013 Friends of Scouting, Prepared for Adventure",
$150 DN
"2013 Friends of Scouting, Prepared for Adventure",
$600 DN
"2013 Friends of Scouting, Prepared for Adventure,
Presenter", $600 DN
"BSA 100th Anniversary"
"Friendly, Friends of Scouting"
"Courteous, Friends of Scouting"
"Kind, Friends of Scouting"
"Obedient, Friends of Scouting"
"2012 Friends of Sciouting"
"NYLT, Staff", white bear, Scoutmaster in middle,
STAFF ghosted in background
"Eagle Scout Class 2011"
"Florida Sea Base"
"Tutelo League 161, NOAC 2012"
"FOS Thrifty 2012", $250 DN
"FOS Thrifty 2012, $1000", $1000 DN
Qty
60
250
30
300
100
300
100
60
300
100
300
100
21
60
3750
300
150
Council
Issue #
Border
Sky/Bkg
FDL
SE
BSA
Name
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
SA-62
SA-63
SA-64
SA-65
SA-66
SA-67
SA-68
SA-69
SA-70
SA-71
SA-72
SA-73
SA-74
SA-75
SA-76
SA-77
SA-78
BLU
RED
GRY c/e
SIL/M c/e
BLK
BLU
BLU
GRY
BLK
RED
BLK
YEL
GLD/M
GLD/M
GRY c/e
SIL/M c/e
BRN
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
GRN
GRN
GRN
GRN
GRN
LT BLU
BLK
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
TAN
YEL
OLIVE
SIL/M
SIL/M
YEL
TAN
GRN
GRN
GRN
GLD/M
GLD/M
BLK
YEL
RED
SIL/M
SIL/M
BLK
GRN
YEL
YEL
BLU
BLU
RED
GRN
YEL
YEL
YEL
RED
RED
RED
WHT
YEL
BLU
BLU
GRN
Buckeye
SA-79
GRY
TAN
BLK
GRN
GRN
Buckeye
SA-80
LT GLD
TAN
BLK
GRN
GRN
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buckeye
Buffalo Trace
Burlington County
Burlington County
Burlington County
Calumet
Cape Fear
Cascade Pacific
SA-81
SA-82
SA-83
SA-84
SA-85
SA-86
SA-38
S-75
S-85
S-86
S-46
SA-19
SA-129
BLU c/e
BLU
GRY
YEL
BLK
RED
WHT
BLK
BLK
BLK
BLK
WHT
GRY
GRY
WHT
WHT
WHT
RED/GLD
RED/GLD
BLU
RED/ORG/YEL
RED/ORG/YEL
RED/ORG/YEL
BLU
BLU
BLU
RED
GRY
RED
BLU
BLU
BLU
YEL
YEL
WHT
BLK
BLK
BLK
BLK
RED
BLU
Catalina
PA-80:1
BLU c/e
BLU
YEL
YEL
Catalina
PA-80:2
GRY c/e
BLU
YEL
YEL
Catalina
Catalina
Catalina
Catalina
Catalina
Catalina
Catalina
Cayuga
Cayuga
Central Florida
Central Florida
Central Florida
Central Florida
Cherokee, TN
SA-94:1
SA-94:2
SA-94:3
SA-94:4
SA-94:5
SA-94:6
SA-97
S-2a
S-2b
SA-148
SA-149
SA-150
SA-151
SA-121:1
GRY
WHT
BRZ
YEL
BRZ
BRZ
SIL/M
BLU
BLU
SIL/M
RED
WHT
DK BLU
RED
LT BLU
WHT
LT BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU/ORG
BLK
BLU
BLU
BLU/DK BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
R/W/B
Cherokee, TN
Cherokee, TN
Chicago Area
Chicago Area
Chicago Area
Chicago Area
Chicago Area
Chicago Area
Chief Okemos
Chief Okemos
Choctaw Area
Choctaw Area
S-127
SA-128
SA-83
SA-84
SA-85
SA-86
TA-87
SA-88
SA-16
SA-17
SA-14:1
SA-14:2
RED
WHT
RED
RED
RED
GRN
WHT
RED
WHT
LT BLU
BLU
BLU
YEL
YEL
R/W/B
RED
R/W/B
LT BLU
GRN
YEL
BLK/BLU
BLU
R/W/B
R/W/B
YEL
WHT
YEL
YEL
YEL
ORG
SIL/M
YEL
YEL
RED
RED
RED
RED
BLU &
RED/WHT
YEL/ORG
YEL/ORG
WHT
RED
WHT
WHT
BLK
WHT
GRN
RED
BLK
BLK
Choctaw Area
Choctaw Area
Choctaw Area
Circle Ten
Circle Ten
Circle Ten
Colonial Virginia
Columbia Mountour
Concho Valley
SA-24
SA-25
SA-25
SA-44
SA-45
SA-46
S-27
S-25
SA-29
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLK
RED c/e
RED
RED
TAN
YEL
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
NAVY
WHT/LT BLU
RED/ORG/YEL
LT BLU
BLU
R/W/B
BLK
BLK
BLK
YEL
GRN
YEL
RED
TAN
WHT
Concho Valley
SA-30
BLK
RED
BLK
BLK
Connecticut Rivers
SA-51
RED
LT BLU
YEL
YEL
Connecticut Yankee
Connecticut Yankee
SA-49:1
SA-49:2
BLK
BLK
BLU
BLU
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
BLK
BLK
R/W/B
BLK
BLK
RED
YEL
YEL
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
RED
BLK
BLK
LT BLU
RED
RED
RED
SIL/M
GRN
RED
WHT
WHT
RED
RED
YEL
RED
YEL
GRN
BLK
GLD
GRN
WHT
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLK
TAN
RED
YEL
YEL
WHT
WHT
26
Issue Description
"2011, Prepared for Life, FOS"
"B.P.I. 2011"
"2011, Eagle Scout"
"2011, Eagle Scout"
"Hall of Fame Parade 2011"
"Staff Sipp-O Lodge 2011, Ox Roast, WWW, 377"
"Membership Team"
"Membership Team"
"Membership Team"
"Back to Basics, Pow Wow 2011"
"Back to Basics, Pow Wow 2011", staff issue
"FOS 2012, Going for the Gold"
"FOS 2012 Presenter, Going for Gold"
"B.P.I. 2012"
"2012, Eagle Scout"
"2012, Eagle Scout"
"Recruiting the Future, The Scout Oath, The Scout
Law, Badge of Honor"
"Recruiting the Future, The Scout Oath, The Scout
Law, Badge of Honor"
"Recruiting the Future, The Scout Oath, The Scout
Law, Badge of Honor"
"Pro Football Hall of Fame, 2012 Parade"
"Membership Team 2012"
"Membership Team 2012"
"Membership Team 2012"
"Leading the Way, Pow Wow 2012"
"Leading the Way, Pow Wow 2012", staff issue
"Eagle Scout, 2011"
Regular wear issue, eagle standing on rock
Regular wear issue, eagle in flight
Regular wear issue, eagle in flight
Regular wear issue
"Philmont Contingent 2012"
"100 Yrs of the Eagle, 1912-2012, Silver Beaver Court
of Honor"
"Celebrating 100 Years of Scouting, 2010 Friends of
Scouting, A Scout is Helpful"
"Celebrating 100 Years of Scouting, 2010 Friends of
Scouting, A Scout is Helpful"
"100 Years of Arizona Scouting, FOS 2011"
"100 Years of Arizona Scouting, FOS 2011"
"Cochise District, FOS 2011"
"Old Pueblo District, FOS 2011"
"Santa Cruz District, FOS 2011"
"Spanish Trails District, FOS 2011"
"2012 Friends of Scouting"
horiz stitched smoke
vert stitched smoke
"Sunshine Trade-O-Ree Celebrates 25"
"FOS 2012, Prepared. For Life.", $350 DN
"FOS 2012, Prepared. For Life.", $500 DN
"FOS 2012, Prepared. For Life.", $1000 DN
"Journey to Excellence"
Tent scene
Tent scene
"2012 Reverent FOS"
"2012 Reverent FOS"
"2012 Reverent FOS, Staff"
"2012, Owasippe Scout Reservation"
"Staff, Hoover Outdoor Education Center"
"Sons of Owasippe", 2012
"2010 Northwoods Alumni"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"FOS 2009, Trustworthy Loyal Helpful"
"FOS 2010, 100 Years of Scouting, Friendly Courteous
Kind"
"FOS 2011, Obedient Cheerful Thrifty"
"FOS 2011, Obedient Cheerful Thrifty", brz/m "$500"
"FOS 2011, Obedient Cheerful Thrifty", sil/m "$500"
"2012 NOAC, Mikanakawa 101"
"Venturing at 37 53 N 81 06 W"
"Epitome, Camp Leader"
Regular wear issue
Regular wear issue
"Celebrating 100 Years, BSA 2010, Friends of
Scouting 2010"
"2011, Friends of Scouting, Larger Than 13 States,
Second Largest Council in America"
"2012, Friends of Scouting, Mark Twain House", $349
DN
"BSA 2010, 100 Years of Scouting", $175 DN
"BSA 2010, Celebrating the Adventure", $350 DN
Qty
300
150
100
100
500
100
15
150
50
500
100
75
50
200
70
30
200
50
100
200
500
100
700
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Council
Issue #
Border
Sky/Bkg
FDL
SE
BSA
SA-49:3
SA-50
BLK
BLK
BLU
LT BLU
GRN
Connecticut Yankee
SA-51
BLK
BLU
YEL
YEL
YEL
Connecticut Yankee
SA-52
BLK
BLU
WHT
WHT
WHT
Connecticut Yankee
PA-53
BLK
LT BLU
RED
BLK
BLK
Connecticut Yankee
PA-54
RED
LT BLU
RED
YEL
YEL
Connecticut Yankee
PA-55
RED
LT BLU
RED
RED
RED
Connecticut Yankee
Connecticut Yankee
Conquistador
Conquistador
Conquistador
Conquistador
Crater Lake
Dan Beard
Del-Mar-Va
Denver Area
SA-56
SA-57
TA-11
TA-12
SA-13
SA-14
S-28
SA-45
SA-35
SA-54
BLU
LT BLU
WHT
OLIVE
RED
NAVY
GLD/M
TAN
YEL
GRN
BLU
BLU
TAN
TAN
GRN
WHT
LT BLU
RED
LT BLU
LT BLU
YEL
RED
YEL
NAVY
YEL
WHT
BLK
BLK
YEL
NAVY
TAN
WHT
WHT
BLK
Des Plaines Valley
Des Plaines Valley
DS-Afghanistan
Erie Shores
SA-18
SA-19
T-3
SA-26
BLK
GLD/M
RUST
YEL
WHT
GLD
BRN
R/W/B
YEL
YEL
GRN
WHT
BLK
BLU
YEL
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-27
TAN
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-28
BLU
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-29
GRN
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-30
BLK
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-31
YEL
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-32
TAN
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-33
BLU
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-34
GRN
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Erie Shores
SA-35
BLK
R/W/B
GRN
WHT
WHT
Evangeline Area
Evangeline Area
Far East
Far East
Far East
Flint River
Gerald R. Ford
Glacier's Edge
Glacier's Edge
Glacier's Edge
Glacier's Edge
Golden Spread
Grand Canyon
Grand Canyon
Grand Teton
Great Alaska
Great Lakes
Great Lakes
Great Lakes
Great Lakes
Great Lakes
Great Lakes
Great Salt Lake
Great Salt Lake
Great Salt Lake
Great Sauk Trail
Greater Alabama
Greater Cleveland
Greater Cleveland
Greater Cleveland
Greater Cleveland
SA-15
SA-16
SA-68
SA-69
SA-70
SA-31
SA-18
SA-28
SA-29
SA-29:1
SA-30
S-23
FA-29
FA-30
SA-323
SA-23
SA-43
SA-44
SA-45
SA-46
SA-47
SA-48
SA-239
SA-240
SA-241
SA-117
SA-42:1
SIL/M
GLD/M
RED
BLU
SIL/M
GLD/M
RED
RED
YEL/BLU c/e
BLK
LT BLU
BLK c/e
RED c/e
BLK c/e
RED c/e
YEL
BLK
BLK
GLD/M
WHT c/e
LT BLU
RED
ORG
YEL
LT BLU
GRN
GRY
WHT
GRN
LT BLU
BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
RED
RED
BLK
BLK
RED
LT BLU
BLU
GRY
GRY
GRY
GRY
BLU/RED
YEL
BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
WHT
BLU
BLU/LT BLU
BLU
BLU
R/W/B
RED
RED
GLD/M
GLD/M
GRN
BLK
RED
GRY
GRY
BLK
BLK
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLU
LT BLU
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
YEL
BLU/PUR
LT BLU
YEL
RED
RED
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
WHT
Name
Connecticut Yankee
Connecticut Yankee
YEL
WHT
WHT
TAN
R/W/B
GLD
YEL
BLK
BLU
SIL/M
SIL/M
WHT
WHT
BLK
BLK
WHT
YEL/RED
YEL/RED
YEL/RED
YEL/RED
WHT
BLK
BLK
BLK
BLK
WHT
GRN
GRN
GRN
GRN
RED
BLU
WHT
RED
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
27
Issue Description
"BSA 2010, Continuing the Journey", $525 DN
"Good Turn Dining Hall at Deer Lake, FOS, 2011",
$175 DN
"Access Adventure at Deer Lake, FOS, 2011", $350
DN
"Access Adventure at Deer Lake, FOS, 2011", $525
DN
"Camp Sequassen - 85th Anniversary 1927-2012",
2012 FOS, $175 DN
"Camp Sequassen - Where Good Scouts Belong",
2012 FOS, $350 DN
"Camp Sequassen - Home of the Hermit, FOS 2012",
$525 DN
"Eagle Scout"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"Eagle Scout Centennial, 1912 2012"
"Eagle Scout Centennial, 1912 2012"
"State Centennial New Mexico"
"New Mexico Sea Scouts"
Regular wear issue
"1912 Eagle Scout Centennial"
"Celebrating the Adventure"
"2012, Somebodies Got To Do It", Summit
Shakedown
"2011 Tokyo World Expedition"
"2012 Japan Expedition"
"Lone Scouts, Kabul-Afghanistan"
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall trader issue
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall event issue
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camp staff issue
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall staff issue
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall FR issue
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall trader issue,
individually numbered
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall event issue,
individually numbered
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camp staff issue,
individually numbered
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall staff issue,
individually numbered
"Centennial Camporee, 1912 2012, 100th
Anniversary, Camp Frontier", camporall FR issue,
individually numbered
"Eagle Scout 100th Anniversary, 1912 2012"
"Eagle Scout 100th Anniversary, 1912 2012"
"1953 2013, We are Scouting in Asia"
"1953 2013, 60 Years of Service"
"Wood Badge"
"Ini-To 324, NOAC 2012, Michigan State University"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"2011, Friends of Scouting, Thrifty", $110 DN, error
"2011, Presenter, Friends of Scouting, Thrifty", error
"2011, Friends of Scouting, Friendly",
"2011, Presenter, Friends of Scouting, Friendly"
error - yel bdr
"NOAC 2012"
"NOAC 2012"
Red OA arrow, 2012 auction participant
"100 Years of Eagles"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"2012 Summit Shakedown"
"2012 Summit Shakedown"
"2012 Summit Shakedown"
"2012 Summit Shakedown"
"2012 Summit Shakedown"
"Scout-O-Rama 2012", Prepared. For Life."
"80, Silver Beaver Association"
"2012 Philmont Contingent"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"Choccolocco", 2008 District FOS
"Thrifty, Friends of Scouting 2012", $185 DN
"Thrifty, Friends of Scouting 2012", $250 DN
"Serving Cleveland for 100 Years", $500 DN
"2012 FOS Unit Leader"
Qty
100
50
100
100
175
400
400
175
50
25
25
25
25
25
500
100
100
100
1110
75
200
3000
200
100
100
100
100
100
500
300
200
150
Council
Issue #
Border
Sky/Bkg
FDL
SE
BSA
Name
Issue Description
Greater New York Brooklyn
Greenwich
Greenwich
Gulf Coast
Gulf Coast
Gulf Stream
Gulf Stream
Hawk Mountain
Hawk Mountain
Hawk Mountain
Hawk Mountain
Hawk Mountain
Hawk Mountain
Hoosier Trails
SA-26
GRN
LT BLU
BLK
WHT/BLK
"2011 Conservation Project"
SA-10
S-11
SA-19:1
SA-24
SA-45
SA-46
SA-60:1
SA-68
SA-69
SA-70
SA-80
SA-81
SA-29a
SIL/M
DK GRN
BLU
SIL/M
TAN c/e
GLD/M c/e
MAG
BRZ/M
SIL/M
GLM/M
RED
ORG
BRN
BLU/LT BLU
LT BLU/PBL
LT BLU
R/W/B
LT BLU
LT BLU
WHT/MAG
BRZ/M
SIL/M
GLM/M
YEL
LT BLU/WHT
YEL
YEL
YEL
GLD
RED, BLU
YEL
YEL
DK GRN
BLK
SIL/M
RED
RED
MAG
BLU
BLU
BLU
RED
YEL
BRN
Hoosier Trails
SA-29b
BRN
YEL
YEL
BRN
Hudson Valley
Indian Nations
Indian Nations
Indian Waters
Indian Waters
Inland Northwest
Inland Northwest
Inland Northwest
Inland Northwest
Juniata Valley
Juniata Valley
Las Vegas Area
Las Vegas Area
Las Vegas Area
Las Vegas Area
Las Vegas Area
Las Vegas Area
Las Vegas Area
Last Frontier
TA-30:1
SA-60
SA-61
SA-35
SA-36
S-97
S-98
S-99
SA-100
SA-28
SA-29
SA-20
SA-21
SA-22
SA-23
SA-24
SA-25
SA-26
SA-26a
BLK
BLK
GLD
RED
GLD/M
RED
SIL/M
GLD/M
RED
BLU
YEL
SIL/M
SIL/M
SIL/M
SIL/M
SIL/M
SIL/M
SIL/M
RED
BLU
BLU
YEL
BLK
RED/BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
R/W/B
NAVY
LT BLU
BLU
BLU/PUR/LT BLU
LT BLU
BLU
BLU/PUR/LT BLU
RED/M/WHT/BLU
WHT
R/W/B
BLU
YEL
RED
RED
BLU/RED
WHT
WHT
WHT
WHT
YEL
WHT
BLU
WHT
BLK
BLU
WHT
BLK
RED/M
BLU
Last Frontier
SA-26b
RED
WHT
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Laurel Highlands
Lewis & Clark
Lewis & Clark
Lewis & Clark
Lewis & Clark
Lincoln Heritage
Lincoln Heritage
TA-28
SA-28
SA-29
SA-17
SA-13
SA-14
SU-C
SU-D
SA-60
S-61
YEL
WHT
LT BLU
LT BLU
BLK
BLK
BLK
BLK
COP/M
YEL
BLU
WHT
PNK
BLU
ORG
ORG
NAVY
NAVY
M/C
BLU
Lincoln Heritage
Long Beach Area
Long Beach Area
Long Beach Area
SA-62
SA-51
SA-52
SA-53
SIL/M
GRY
RED
YEL
BLU
LT BLU
WHT
LT BLU
Longhouse
Longhouse
Longhouse
Longhouse
Longhouse
SA-56
SA-57
SA-58
SA-59
SA-60
GRN
YEL
SIL/M
GLD/M
BLK
TAN
TAN
TAN
TAN
AQUA
Longhouse
Longhouse
Longhouse
Longhouse
Longhouse
Los Angeles Area
SA-61
SA-62
SA-63
SA-64
SA-65
TA-144
BLK
BLK
GRN
GRN
DK BLU
RED
BLU/TAN/RED
BLU/TAN/RED
BLU
BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
YEL
YEL
RED/M
WHT
WHT
RED
RED
DK BLU
BLK
Los Angeles Area
SA-145
YEL
BLU
WHT
RED
Los Angeles Area
SA-146
SIL/M
BLU
WHT
RED
Los Angeles Area
SA-147
GLD/M
BLU
WHT
RED
Los Padres
SA-6
BLK
RED/BLU
Marin
SA-7
GRN
GLD
YEL
BLK
Mason-Dixon
Mason-Dixon
Mason-Dixon
Mason-Dixon
Mason-Dixon
SA-55
SA-56
SA-57
SA-58
SA-59
BLU
YEL
RED
RED
BRN
R/W/B
R/W/B
R/W/B
BLU/GRY
LT BLU
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLU
YEL
Issued as Exec Thank You
"Established 1912, 67"
"2011, Friends of Scouting, Friendly"
"Eagle Scout"
"Sea Scouts Centennial, 1912 2012"
"Sea Scouts Centennial, 1912 2012"
"Eagle Scout, Class of 2011"
"Journey to Excellence", 2012 FOS, $100 DN
"Journey to Excellence", 2012 FOS, $175 DN
"Journey to Excellence", 2012 FOS, $250 DN
"Kittatinny Lodge V, MSU, NOAC 2012"
"July 13-17, 2012, The West Virginia Adventure"
"A Scout is Obedient, FOS 2012, On My Honor",
52x130mm
"A Scout is Obedient, FOS 2012, On My Honor",
47x109mm
"A Scout is Brave, 2011 FOS"
"Trailblazer, 2011"
"2012, Hale Scout Reservation"
"100 Years of Eagle Scouts"
"2012, National Youth Leadership Training"
Regular wear issue - troops
Regular wear issue - district
Regular wear issue - council
Individually numbered
"Eagle Scout 1912-2012"
"Juniata, 1937 2012, Monaken"
"Del Webb"
"Kimball Scout Reservation"
"Camp Levi Levi"
"Del Webb", individually numbered
"Kimball Scout Reservation", individually numbered
"Camp Levi Levi", individually numbered
"100th Anniversary, Eagle Scout"
"Ma Nu 133, Eagle Scout", sil/m highlights on Eagle
badge
"Ma Nu 133, Eagle Scout", gry highlights on Eagle
badge
"Trail Blazer", 2012 for FOS presenters
"Man Nu 133, 2012 Eagle Centennial"
"1912-2012, Sea Scout Centennial"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"Wood Badge C3-114-12"
"Wood Badge C3-114-12, Staff"
"Firecrafter, Est. 1920, Rock River"
"Firecrafter, Est. 1920, Wacca Lake"
"Back to Gilwell, 21st Century Wood Badge"
"Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee" - Regular
Wear issue
"25 Years, Camp Crooked Creek"
"1912 2012, Sea Scout Centennial"
"FOS 2012, Prepared. For Life."
"1912 2012, Sea Scout Centennial", individually
numbered
"Sabattis Scout Reservation, 2012"
"Sabattis Scout Reservation, 2012 Camp Leader"
"Sabattis Scout Reservation, 2012 Scoutmaster"
"Sabattis Scout Reservation, 2012 Staff"
"Bill Hillcourt Museum Chairman, William E. McGee
1937-2012"
"NYLT-2012, N3-373-12"
"NYLT-2012, N3-373-12, Staff"
"World Brotherhood Camporee 2012"
"World Brotherhood Camporee 2012, Staff"
"100 Years of Eagle Scouts"
"Siwinis Lodge 252, NOAC 2012, MSU, WWW",
delegate issue
"William J. "Mohawk" Marvin, Boy Scout Memorabilia
Auction 2012", attendee issue
"William J. "Mohawk" Marvin, Boy Scout Memorabilia
Auction 2012", $25 DN
"William J. "Mohawk" Marvin, Boy Scout Memorabilia
Auction 2012", $50 DN
"1912 2012, Sea Scouts. An American Tradition Since
1912"
"National Council, BSA W3-35-12-1, Leave No Scout
Behind"
"NESA Member, Eagle Centennial 2012"
"Eagle Centennial 2012"
"Eagle Scout, Eagle Centennial 2012"
"1862-2012, Battle of Antietam"
"Bloody Lane"
RED
RED
MAG
BRZ/M
SIL/M
GLM/M
YEL
WHT
RED
BLK
YEL
BLU
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
WHT
TAN
BLK
WHT
TAN
BLK
RED/M
TAN
YEL
WHT
BLU
YEL
PNK
RED
YEL
YEL
COP/M
YEL
RED
RED
COP/M
WHT
GRY
GRY
YEL
R/W/B
YEL
TAN
TAN
TAN
TAN
BLK
TAN
TAN
R/W/B
YEL
RED
BLU
LT BLU
WHT
BLK
BLK
WHT
WHT
COP/M
WHT
GRY
BLU
BLU
BLU
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLK
WHT
28
Qty
250
150
150
150
100
100
100
100
200
400
100
100
350
100
100
75
75
100
100
125
50
25
25
100
350
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Council
Issue #
Border
Sky/Bkg
FDL
SE
BSA
SA-60
SA-61
SA-62
SA-63
SA-44
SA-45
SA-39:1
S-1
SA-2
SA-3
TA-11
SA-18:1
SA-21
SA-11:1
S-20
SA-91
SA-92
SA-93
SA-94
SA-95
SA-96
BRN
BRN
BRN
BRN
YEL
BLU
GLD/M
BLK
BLU/M
BLU/M
WHT c/e
R/W/B c/e
BLK
SIL/M
WHT
BLK c/e
BLK c/e
BLK c/e
RED
GLD/M
DK GRY c/e
LT BLU
LT BLU
GRY
LT BLU
R/W/B
R/W/B
WHT
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
RED
BLU
GRY
LT BLU/BLK/RED
LT BLU/AQUA/PUR
BLU
BLU
BLU
GRN
LT BLU
BLK
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
WHT
WHT
GRN
WHT
WHT
WHT
RED
BLK
RED
YEL
YEL
BLK
BLK
BLK
YEL
GLD/M
GRY
Minsi Trails
Minsi Trails
Minsi Trails
Mohegan
Mohegan
Mohegan
Montana
Montana
SA-97
SA-98
SA-99
SA-43
S-44
SA-45
S-91
SA-97
BRN c/e
BRN c/e
BRN c/e
RED
BLK
AQUA
PUR
BLK
GRN
GRN
GRN
BLU
LT BLU
WHT
PNK/YEL
YEL
BRN
BRN
BRN
GRN
Montana
SA-98
BLK
YEL
RED
BLK
Montana
SA-99
SIL/M
PUR/BLK
LT BLU
WHT
Montana
SA-100
SIL/M
PUR/BLK
LT BLU
WHT
Montana
Mount Diablo Silverado
Muskingum Valley
Muskingum Valley
Muskingum Valley
Muskingum Valley
Muskingum Valley
Narragansett
Nashua Valley
S-101
SA-9
SA-50a
SA-50b
SA-54
SA-55
SA-56
TA-41
SA-42
PUR
YEL
RED
RED
LT BLU
TAN
TAN
WHT
GRN
PNK/YEL
R/W/B
WHT
WHT
BLU
RED
RED
WHT
BLU
PUR
Nashua Valley
Nashua Valley
SA-43
SA-44
GRN
GRN
Nashua Valley
Nashua Valley
Nashua Valley
Nashua Valley
Nashua Valley
Nashua Valley
National Capital Area
SA-45
SA-46
SA-47
SA-48
SA-49
SA-50
SA-114:1
National Capital Area
National Capital Area
National Capital Area
National Capital Area
National Capital Area
North Florida
North Florida
North Florida
Northeast Iowa
Northeast Iowa
Northeast Iowa
Northern New Jersey
Northern New Jersey
Northern Star
Northwest Suburban
Northwest Texas
Northwest Texas
Norwela
Norwela
Norwela
Occoneechee
Ohio River Valley
Ohio River Valley
Okefenokee Area
Okefenokee Area
Okefenokee Area
SA-122
SA-123
SA-124
TA-125
TA-126
SA-82
SA-83
SA-84
SA-10
SA-11
SA-12
SA-28
SA-29
SA-4
SA-26
S-14
SA-15
SA-39:1
SA-41:1
SA-45
SA-73
SA-30
SA-31
SA-41:1
SA-41:2
SA-41:3
Issue Description
Qty
350
350
350
350
RED
PUR
YEL
BLK
BLK
WHT
TAN
TAN
WHT
RED
BLU
BLU
RED
RED
RED
RED
GRN
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
RED
RED
GRN
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
RED
GRN
"Burnside Bridge"
"Dunker Church"
"Lonely Grave"
"Miller's Cornfield"
"Cub Scouts, Scouter Success Seminar, 2012, CPCC"
"Cub Scouts, Scouter Success Seminar, 2012, CPCC"
"F.O.S. Cheerful 2008"
Worn by Professionals only
Fundraiser issue
Individually numbered
a"Omaha Council, 1916 1929, 1 of 7, BFSM, MAC"
"1910 2010, 100 Years of Service"
"2011, Courteous, FOS"
Like design of SA-11
Regular wear issue
"Settlers Camp 2011, MTC, TSR"
"Settlers Camp 2011, MTC, TSR, Leader"
"Settlers Camp 2011, MTC, TSR, Staff"
"2011", campership
"2012", campership
"The Lost Temple of Akela, 2012 MTC, Akelaland Cub
Scout Resident Camp"
"Settlers Camp 2012, MTC, TSR"
"Settlers Camp 2012, MTC, TSR, Leader"
"Settlers Camp 2012, MTC, TSR, Staff"
"Walker Memorial"
"Since 1911, Prepared. For Life."
"Trustworthy, FOS"
Regular wear issue, r/w/b bandana on skull
"Bear Shaman, Montana Artists Series 2011",
unnumbered
"Bear Shaman, Montana Artists Series 2011",
individually numbered
"Blues in the High Notes, Montana Artists Series
2012", unnumbered
"Blues in the High Notes, Montana Artists Series
2012", individually numbered
Regular wear issue, wht bandana on skull
"1912 2012, Sea Scouts, BSA Centennial"
"M.V.S.R." on left side, "Netawatwees" on right side
"M.V.S.R." on right side, "Netawatwees" on left side
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"C-4-467-12"
"C-4-467-12, Staff"
"NYLT Staff, White Stag, Be-Know-Do DSA"
"Captain Isaac Davis, Camp Split Rock", $150
campership
"Captain Isaac Davis, Camp Split Rock Staff"
"Captain Isaac Davis, Camp Wanocksett", $150
campership
"Captain Isaac Davis, Camp Wanocksett Staff"
"Captain Isaac Davis, District Committee"
"Captain Isaac Davis, Commissioner Staff"
"Captain Isaac Davis, Executive Board"
"Captain Isaac Davis, FOS Presenters"
"Captain Isaac Davis, Council Staff"
"2011, Friends of Scouting - Brave", $185 DN
RED
BLK
GLD/M
GRN c/e
TAN c/e
ORG
GRY
ORG
BLU
SIL/M
GLD/M
GLD/M
SIL/M
LT BLU
WHT
BLK
RED
RED
BLU
LT BLU
RED
BLU/M
RED/M
BLK
GRN
SIL/M
DK BLU
PUR
BLU
OLIVE
TAN
LT BLU
AQUA
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
WHT
GLD/M
BLU
BLU
M/C
LT BLU
LT BLU
GRN
BLU
TAN
ORG
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
BLU
YEL
GLD/M
GRN
GRN
GLD
GRY
WHT/ORG
WHT
WHT
WHT
BLU
BLK
WHT
YEL
WHT
RED
RED
GLD/M
WHT
RED
BLU/ORG
BLK
YEL
YEL
YEL
"100 Years of Eagle Scouts"
"University of Scouting, Ph. D."
"Cub World, Camp William B. Snyder"
"N. C. A. C. Boy Scouts of America"
"N. C. A. C. Boy Scouts of America"
"2012 Jamboree Shakedown"
"To Do My Best"
Florida University gator
"NOAC 2012"
"NOAC 2012"
"NOAC 2012"
"Thrifty, Words to Live By, FOS", 2011
"Brave, FOS", 2012
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"2011"
Regular wear issue
"2012 Family FOS"
"Brave", 2009 FOS
"Clean, Making a Difference - FOS, 1910 2010"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"2012, Philmont Contingent"
"NOAC 2012, WWW, Onondaga Lodge 36"
"Shakin the Mountain 2012"
"2010, Trustworthy, Friends of Scouting", $100 DN
"2010, Trustworthy, Friends of Scouting", $250 DN
"2010, Trustworthy, Friends of Scouting", $365 DN
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLU
BLU
YEL
GRN
GRN
GRN
WHT
Name
Mason-Dixon
Mason-Dixon
Mason-Dixon
Mason-Dixon
Mecklenburg County
Mecklenburg County
Miami Valley
Michigan Crossroads
Michigan Crossroads
Michigan Crossroads
Mid America
Middle Tennessee
Middle Tennessee
Midnight Sun
Midnight Sun
Minsi Trails
Minsi Trails
Minsi Trails
Minsi Trails
Minsi Trails
Minsi Trails
R/W/B
GRY
YEL
AQUA/BLU
WHT
WHT
WHT
DK GRN
GLD/M
BLK
R/W/B
YEL
PUR
RED
PUR
PUR
GRY
YEL, WHT
YEL, WHT
RED
BLK/WHT
BLK/WHT
WHT
GLD, WHT,
BRN
TAN
BLU
GLD/M
GLD/M
R/W/B
GLD/M
GLD
WHT
BLU
ORG
ORG
ORG
BLU
ORG
RED
BLU
WHT
WHT
RED
GLD/M
RED
TAN
YEL
BLU
BLK
GLD PIN
WHT
WHT
WHT
29
BRN
BRN
BRN
WHT
RED
BLU
PUR
BLK
100
20
500
400
400
2000
75
150
75
150
400
600
600
120
50
75
100
125
40
40
25
30
25
2000
800
800
170
200
Council
Issue #
Border
Sky/Bkg
FDL
Okefenokee Area
Okefenokee Area
Okefenokee Area
Old Colony
Old Colony
SA-45
SA-46
SA-47
SA-64
SA-65
BLK
SIL/M
GLD/M
BLU
GRY
BLU
BLU
BLU
ORG
BLU
WHT
WHT
WHT
Old Hickory
Old Hickory
Old Hickory
SA-22
SA-23
SA-24
BLK
GRY
GLD/M
BLU TARTAN
DK BLU
LT BLU
TAN & GRY
GRY
GLD/M
Orange County
Orange County
Orange County
Orange County
Orange County
SA-289:1
SA-327:1
SA-327:2
SA-339
SA-340
RED
RUST
RUST
BRN
RED
R/W/B
LT BLU
ORG
LT BLU
LT BLU
WHT
LT BLU
GRY
Orange County
Orange County
Orange County
Orange County
Orange County
Orange County
Ore-Ida
Ore-Ida
Ore-Ida
Oregon Trail
Oregon Trail
Oregon Trail
Oregon Trail
Otschodela
SA-341
SA-342
SA-343
SA-344
SA-345
SA-346
SA-71
SA-72
SA-73
S-44
SA-45
SA-46
SA-47
T-53
YEL
RUST
BRN
WHT
SIL/M
SIL/M
GRN
RED/M
GLD/M
BLK
GRN
TAN
WHT
YEL
LT GRY/ORG/DK GRY
BLK
BLK
BLK
BLU
ORG
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
YEL
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLK
LT GRY
BLU
BLU
BLU
GRY
GRY
BLU
BLU
BLU
GRN
GRN
GRN
GRN
Otschodela
Pacific Harbors
Pacific Harbors
Pacific Harbors
Pacific Harbors
Palmetto
Patriots' Path
Patriots' Path
Pennsylvania Dutch
Pennsylvania Dutch
Piedmont, NC
Piedmont, NC
Piedmont, NC
Pine Tree
Pony Express
Potawatomi Area
Potawatomi Area
Puerto Rico
Quapaw Area
SA-54
SA-42
SA-43
SA-44
SA-45
SA-31
SA-39
SU-B
SA-20
SA-21
SA-51
SA-51:1
SA-54
SA-42
SA-10:1
SA-249
SA-249
SA-124
S-43a
R/W/B
TAN
BLK
GRN
DK BLU
ORG
WHT
BLU
R/W/B
PUR/FUSHIA/ORG
RED/BLU
RED/BLU
BLU
PUR
TAN
R/W/B
BLU
BLK
LT BLU/TAN
Quapaw Area
S-43b
Quapaw Area
Revolutionary Trails
Revolutionary Trails
Sam Houston Area
Sam Houston Area
SA-48
TA-36
SA-37
SA-57:1
SA-58:1
GLD
DK GRN
BLK
DK GRN
SIL/M
BLK
WHT
GLD/M
WHT
WHT
GRY
SIL/M
LT BLU
PUR
TAN
YEL
LT BLU
RED
RED w/ LT BLU
inner
RED w/ WHT
inner
BLK
YEL
YEL c/e
BLK
BLK
Sam Houston Area
SA-61
GRY
LT BLU/WHT
San Francisco Bay Area SA-14:1
ORG
PUR/ORG
Santa Clara County
Santa Fe Trail
Shawnee Trails
Shawnee Trails
Sioux
SA-76
SA-24
SA-24
SA-25
SA-38
WHT
BLU c/e
BLK
WHT
BLU
GRN
R/W/B
TAN/GRN
M/C
BLU/AQUA
South Florida
South Florida
Southeast Wisconsin
Southern New Jersey
Southern New Jersey
Southern New Jersey
Southern Shores FSC
Southern Shores FSC
Southern Sierra
Southern Sierra
Southern Sierra
Southern Sierra
Southern Sierra
Tecumseh
Texas Southwest
SA-59
SA-60
TA-28:1
SA-74
SA-75
SA-76
S-1
SA-2
S-19
SA-20
SA-21
SA-22
SA-23
SA-64
S-1
SIL/M c/e
SIL/M c/e
RED c/e
GLD/M
SIL/M
GLD/M
YEL
RED
ORG
YEL
ORG
YEL
GRN
BLK
BLK
BLU
BLU
BLU
DK BLU/BLU/LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
RED/ORG/YEL
RED/ORG/YEL
BLU
BLU
BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
BLU
RED/YEL/ORG
SE
Name
GRY
RED
WHT
BLK
BLK
BLK
SIL/M
WHT
BLK
WHT
WHT
WHT
GRY
SIL/M
WHT
WHT
GRN
YEL
WHT
RED
RED
RED
RED
Regular wear issue
BLU/WHT
WHT
WHT
BLU
YEL
BLK
BLU/WHT
WHT
"2012 FOS, Centennial of First Eagle Scout"
"Camp Russell 2012"
"Eagle Scout"
"2010, See You at the Hill"
"Fiestas Patrias, Mexico 2011, 43rd Annual
International Parade"
"Fiestas Patrias, Guatemala 2012, 44th Annual
International Parade"
"Wente Scout Reservation, Farp Dry Creek Area
Council", no council name, Staff issue
"Friends of Scouting 2012, A Scout is Clean"
"1912 100 Years of Eagle Scouts 2012"
"Legionnaires of Kentucky, For God and Country"
"Commissioner College, 1994-2012"
"WWW 1937-2012, Tetonwana Lodge, 75 Years of
Service", campership
"Eagle Scout 2011"
"Eagle Sponsor 2011"
"2010, Scouting for Food"
"Trail of the Eagle"
"2012, "On My Honor", FOS"
"2012, "On My Honor", FOS, Presenter"
Regular wear issue
Fundraiser issue
Regular wear issue
"Trustworthy, FOS", $150 DN
"Trustworthy, FOS", $250 DN
"Loyal, FOS", $150 DN
"Loyal, FOS", $250 DN
"Tarhe 292, 2012 NOAC"
Regular wear issue
BLK
YEL
YEL
YEL
BLK
RED
Issue Description
"2011, Loyal, Friends of Scouting", $100 DN
"2011, Loyal, Friends of Scouting", $250 DN
"2011, Loyal, Friends of Scouting", $365 DN
"Sponsor a Scout", FOS, 2012 issue
"100 Years of Leadership, Class of 2011, Eagle Scout
Centennial 1912-2012"
"Wood Badge, NYLT"
"Clean", 2010 FOS
"Be Prepared, Do Your Best, Friends of Scouting",
2012, $250 DN
"Rangemaster Centennial Encampment, BSA 2010"
"2012 Wiatava, Lodge 13", auction donor
"2012 Wiatava, Lodge 13, Argus", auction donor
"Schoepe Scout Reservation at Lost Valley, 2012"
"Schoepe Scout Reservation at Lost Valley, 2012,
Staff"
"Wiatava Lodge 13, NOAC 2012"
"Orange County Fair, 2012", participant issue
"Orange County Fair, 2012", committee issue
"Orange County Fair, 2012", prep team issue
"Western Region Powder Horn 2012"
"Western Region Powder Horn 2012"
"Outdoor Ethics"
"Outdoor Ethics"
"Outdoor Ethics"
Regular wear issue
Like design of S-44
Like design of S-44
Like design of S-44
"Leatherstocking Country, 1924 2012, Uncas at
Glimmerglass"
"2012 Council Auction"
"Hahobas, 2012"
"Hahobas, 2012"
"Hahobas, Staff"
"NOAC 2012 - United, We Leave a Legacy"
"Camp Bob Hardin Staff, 2012"
"2012 Alumni Association, Prepared. For Life."
Like design of SA-2 but has red fdl
"A Century of Eagle Scouts, 1912 2012"
"Eagle Scout"
"National Youth Leadership Training"
"National Youth Leadership Training"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"NOAC 2012 MSU, WWW"
"90th Anniversary, 2006 FOS"
"2011 Eagle Scout"
"2012, Michigan International Camporee"
"2012 Guajataka"
Regular wear issue
GRY
GRY
BLK
RED
WHT
WHT
RED
GRN
BLU
WHT
WHT
ORG
WHT
WHT
WHT
ORG
ORG
GRN
GRN
GRN
TAN
TAN
TAN
TAN
YEL
GLD
GLD
RED
BLK
RED
GRN
WHT
WHT
R/W/B
RED
WHT
GRY
GRY
RED
PUR
GRN
YEL
RED
GRY
LT BLU/TAN
M/C
BLU
R/W/B
BLK
GRN/WHT/RED
BSA
YEL
WHT
YEL
BLK
BLK
WHT
BLU
BLU
YEL
BLK
BLK
SIL/M
YEL
YEL
SIL/M
RED
GLD/M
ORG
ORG
YEL
YEL
ORG
BLU
BLU
RED
RED
BLK
BLK
30
GLD/M
GLD/M
BLU
RED
BLK
BLK
WHT
WHT
ORG
BLK
BLK
RED
RED
BLK
BLK
Qty
65
75
500
200
300
70
40
125
100
100
50
150
100
1000
300
200
200
200
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Council
Issue #
Border
Sky/Bkg
FDL
SE
BSA
BLK
WHT
Issue Description
SA-2
SA-107
BLK c/e
DK GRN
RED/YEL/ORG
GRN TARTAN
BLK
RED
Theodore Roosevelt
SA-107:1
DK GRN
GRN TARTAN
RED
WHT
Theodore Roosevelt
SA-131
BLK
TAN
TAN
BLK
Theodore Roosevelt
SA-132
GLD/M
TAN
TAN
BLK
Theodore Roosevelt
Trapper Trails
Trapper Trails
Trapper Trails
Twin Rivers
Twin Rivers
Twin Rivers
Twin Rivers
Twin Rivers
Water and Woods FSC
Western Colorado
Western Los Angeles
Westmoreland-Fayette
Westmoreland-Fayette
SA-133
SA-163
SA-164
SA-165
SA-138
SA-139
SA-140
SA-141
SA-142
S-1
SA-137
SA-54
SA-15
SA-16
RED
GRN
RED
GLD/M
BLU
YEL
GRN
SIL/M
GLD/M
BRN
GLD/M
ORG
BLK
GLD
ORG
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
TAN
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
LT BLU
BLU
R/W/B
WHT
RED
LT BLU
LT BLU
GLD/M
YEL
BRN
WHT
WHT
WHT
YEL
ORG
YEL
GLD
GRN
RED
RED
GLD/M
BLU
RED
RED
RED
RED
BRN
GLD/M
WHT
YEL
BRN
"Advanced Leadership Training", no council name
"Celebrating the Adventure, Continuing the Journey,
1910 2010, 100 Years of Scouting, Wood Badge",
issued jointly with Suffolk County
"Celebrating the Adventure, Continuing the Journey,
1910 2010, 100 Years of Scouting, NE-VII-19", issued
jointly with Suffolk County
"Wood Badge 2012, N7-386-12", issued jointly with
Suffolk County
"Wood Badge 2012, N7-386-12", issued jointly with
Suffolk County
"Onteora Scout Reservation, Staff 2012"
Issued for donating 1 scout shirt
Issued for donating 4 scout shirts
"2012 Camp Staff, Reinforcing Core Values"
"Rotary Scout Reservation, 1922-2012"
"Camp Wakpominee, Handicraft"
"2012, Scouting Decathalon"
"2012, Scouting Decathalon"
"2012, Scouting Decathalon"
Regular wear issue
"70th Anniversary, 1942 2012"
"Summer Adventure, West Virginia, 2012"
"Eagle Class of 2011"
"75, 1937-2012, Honored Traditions, Timeless Values"
Yocona Area
Yucca
SA-77
SA-111
RED
BLK
LT BLU
RED/ORG
TAN
BLK
BLK
BLK
"150 Hours of Camp Service"
"Journey to Excellence"
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
ORG/BLK
Name
Texas Southwest
Theodore Roosevelt
YEL
YEL
YEL
31
Qty
825
500
50
100
300
150
300
200
50
25
200
HAPPY TRAILS
Abraham Lincoln & His Legacy on
Hiking Trails
By
Larry Faulkner
ISCA #7708
With the 150th Anniversary of the
Civil War in full swing and the rave
reviews for Steven Spielberg’s
cinema offering “Lincoln,” there
[email protected]
could not be a better time to
examine the impact this great
American leader had on Boy Scout trails throughout the Midwest
and East Coast. So popular is President Lincoln that over 20
trails sprang up in six states each providing a special Trail Medal
for completing the trek. His impact was felt in his home state of
Kentucky up through his middle youth and young adulthood in
Indiana and on to Illinois, where he made a name for himself.
The trails named for President Lincoln are listed below by State:
Illinois:
•
Abraham Lincoln
•
Illinois Lincoln Trail
•
Lincoln Circuit Trail
•
Lincoln-Douglas Heritage
•
Lincoln Heritage
•
Lincoln Homesite
•
Lincoln Trail
Indiana:
•
Lincoln Sesquicentennial
•
Lincoln Bicentennial
•
Indiana Lincoln Trail
•
Kentucky:
•
Freedom Trail (E&K R.R.)
•
Kentucky Lincoln Trail
•
Gettysburg Address Trail
•
Lincoln Sesquicentennial
Ohio:
•
Lincoln Memorial Pilgrimage
Pennsylvania:
•
Gettysburg Trail
•
Washington, D.C.:
•
Lincoln Pilgrimage
•
Lincoln Trail (NCAC)
The oldest of the trails is the Abraham Lincoln Illinois Trail. Their
trail can be dated back to November 6, 1926 and featured a
red, white, and blue Ribbon with a brass suspended medal that
had a silhouette of Abraham Lincoln and the dates 1809-1865.
The trail ran 20 miles from New Salem, IL to Springfield, IL –
the same route that Lincoln used to walk as a youth to borrow
books so that he might continue the study of law. In 1959 a
special Sesquicentennial Medal was produced looking like the
normal medal but with a Top Bar indicating the dates 1809 –
1959. Around 1970 the Trail Medal was changed to reflect
Lincoln walking down the road reading a law book that was more
in keeping with the purpose of the trail. It is sponsored by the
Abraham Lincoln Council in Springfield.
Another trail with a long history was the Kentucky Lincoln
Trail that started in August 1942 and was sponsored by the
Zit-Kala-Sha Lodge. A monster of a trail, it ran 32 miles from
Elizabethtown through a scenic mountainous section of Kentucky
to Hodgenville. It was an overnight trek that required the Scouts
to camp Lincoln’s boyhood home near Knob Creek. This traile
was easily the toughest of the trails to complete. The medal
associated with this trail had various colored ribbons – the most
common being a Brown & Yellow on with a pewter colored bust
of Lincoln that said “Abraham Lincoln – Born Feb12th, 1809.”
The Medal looked much like the penny which bears his likeness.
32
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Lincoln Trail Medals
In Indiana, Lincoln spent his youthful years that coincided with
the age of Cub, Boy, and Venture Scouts. The Indiana Historical
Commission in conjunction with the Buffalo Trace Council in
Evansville, IN created this 17.1 mile followed the trek of Lincoln’s
family to their new Indiana home. A beautiful medal was awarded
showing Lincoln reading in front of a fireplace. This medal has
also recreated for the Bicentennial Encampment celebrating
Lincoln’s 200th birthday in 2008.
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
33
In Decatur, IL was one of the most popular Lincoln Trails –
the Lincoln Homesite Trail (originally named the Homestead
Trail but changed). It ran 20 miles in length from Decatur to
the Sangamon River, circumnavigating the river to the site
of Lincoln’s home in Macon County – Harristown and then
returning to the log cabin in Fairview Park where Lincoln
practiced law.
Hobby Trends
Tipping Point
by Roy More , ISCA # 0020L
A realtor friend of mine once said she was told, when asked “How
is the real estate market?” to answer “Unbelievable.” It could be
unbelievably good. Or, it could be unbelievably bad!
This thought comes to mind based upon conversations I have
had over the past year with senior collectors and dealers. This
may be heresy as a patch dealer but here goes – We have
passed the point where councils and lodges are making more
patches than our wallets can afford. I mark it as heresy that as
a dealer and market maker some think we should always be
upbeat and optimistic. We are. When we’re talking about true
collectibles. But much of what is coming out now feels more like
Beanie Babies than collectibles.
Now with the trend towards filling in a collection these items can
be sought after. Collectors are focusing on a few local lodges and
councils but collecting everything related to them not just cloth.
This is a VERY positive and powerful trend.
Muscogee Lodge 221 neckerchief slide brought $203.
How many times have you attended trade-o-rees and seen
tables full of OA two-piece sets or stacks of new special issue
CSPs? Too many times in my opinion.
In economics there is a theory called Gresham’s Law. It dates
back to the 1500’s although a good Wikipedia search shows
references back to ancient Greece. This law states that bad
money drives out good. It has to do with the debasement of
currencies by governments in order to spend more but there
is a parallel in hobbies. It has happened to the aforementioned
Beanie Babies but also to baseball cards, Hummel figurines,
animation art cells and other collectibles. Its where the makers
of the collectibles have turned up the printing presses for a short
term gain but at the long-term detriment.
Now all is not lost and I’ll get into that but as some perspective,
last year we sent out over 5,000 orders of patches; more than 100
per week representing over 20,000 patches. That is an indication
of a strong hobby but there are cross currents. Collectors are
coming into the hobby arguably at a faster rate than they are
leaving. But if all that they see is modern, mass-produced items
then that will be their focus. The mass-produced patches have
driven under the table or back into the box the good vintage
patches. The good patches are good because they were made to
be used as recognition within the Scouting program. They were
worn. They were coveted. They were limited in their production
and distribution.
Yaqui Lodge 138 Vigil certificate brought $960.
But what the ‘bad driving out the good’ is doing is allowing many
true rarities to pass as bargains because most folks do not know
how rare they are because they never see them.
This is not the first time our hobby has created collectibles for the
sake of trading. Those of us old enough to remember the 1985
National Jamboree remember how hat-pins were the rage. Now
they are hard to give away. Scout mugs used to be quite popular
but now are not worth the cost of shipping. Same can be said for
most handbooks after 1920. But OA Caldwell pins that could be
bought for $100 - $200 in 1985 can sell for ten to twenty times as
much today. True collectibles win out.
1937
National
Jamboree
Poster
brought
$761.
One can have fun with the modern items. I have many in my
collection and enjoy picking them up but I realize they are not
where the value is or will be. If they come my way, great but if
they don’t oh well. What needs to happen is for these patches to
no longer be profitable for the producers.
So what is positive that is happening within the hobby? What I
and my team see is with so much out there Scouting collectors
are going for depth rather than breadth. Collectors are looking
to put the story with the patches. They are rounding out their
collections. What used to be ancillary items that were overlooked
are bringing what might be surprising prices. See pictures 1, 2
and 3. In days past these would not have had much interest.
34
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Gimogash Lodge 214 X2
Wah-pe-kah-me-kunk
Lodge 512 X1 brought
$750.
Kola Lodge 464
Vigil Caldwell totem
pin
This item sold for $750 at auction with one bidder. Prior prices
for this have been $3,500 or more. It will likely bring this again
as these were used by the lodge’s 1956 NOAC contingent and is
the first patch from the lodge. There are likely less than ten (10)
ever made and issued. As issued on neckerchief it is even rarer.
But most collectors do not know this. Unless we, the hobby, tell
them and show them.
The best items are most likely to be privately placed. Examples
we moved this year that did not see the light of day include a 214
X2 at $18,000 and a Lodge 464 Vigil totem pin at $5,000 and
many other four and five figure patches. That is often the way it
is with high-end collectibles. The best pieces are handled by the
best dealers as they know the value and the buyer
Last year the National Order of the Arrow Conference gave
more space than ever before to a museum exhibit. Leaders in
the hobby, adult and youth, brought together a great display
and great history but we need to do this better and more often.
Display your collections at council and lodge events but include
more than just frames of patches. Tell the story of how they were
used, when they were issued and their connection to Scouting.
In the on-line OA Blue Book one can now post comments for
each issue. Why? To capture and re-tell this history. Anyone can
contribute. If you want this hobby to not become Beanie Babies,
you need to give back.
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INTERNATIONAL
Friday May 31st
Saturday June 1st
Scouting Memorabilia
All Proceeds Benefit
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Over 150 Attendees in 2012 !!!
****************************************
Collections MB 7:00 pm 05/31/2013
Art MB 7:30 pm 05/31/2013
exchange & show
2013
Another Chance to Exchange Stories
Philmont Staff Association Reunion
Saturday 6/1 at TOR
www.lonestartor.com
***************************************
John Ryan
ISCA Life Member
817.939.5673
[email protected]
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013
Sep 26 – 29
33 HOURS of Trading
www.worldscoutingmuseum.org
Table info: [email protected]
35
ISCA CODE OF ETHICS
All members of the International Scouting Collectors Association (ISCA)
subscribe to a Code of Ethics to insure fair trading practices amongst its
members. All members sign a statement subscribing to this Code.
I
will:
S
et an example in which we all can take pride.
C
onsciously, fairly represent items of Scout memorabilia.
A
lways follow the rules of the event that apply to trading.
E
xtend the hand of friendship to all collectors.
T
rade or sell no patch that I know to be a fake or reproduction
without disclosing the fact.
H
elp new collectors get started.
I
mpress on new collectors the importance of ethics in trading.
C
urrently be eligible to be registered in Scouting.
S
trive for fairness in all actions consistent with the Scout Oath
& Law.
36
ISCA JOURNAL - MARCH 2013