Yankee Clipper Council

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Yankee Clipper Council
File:Yankee Clipper Council CSP.png
OwnerBoy Scouts of America
CountryUnited States
Founded1993
Scout ExecutiveRandy Larson
Website
http://www.yccbsa.org
 Scouting portal

The Yankee Clipper Council is a council of the Boy Scouts of America serving 52 communities in northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire. The council was formed from a merger of the North Essex Council, North Bay Council, and Lone Tree Council in 1993. Greater Lowell Council merged with Yankee Clipper in 2000. Greater Lowell Council chose to merge with Yankee Clipper over three adjacent councils. Greater Lowell District formed the fifth spoke on the ship's wheel totem of the YCC council strip arm patch. The council now operates two camps; Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation and Lone Tree Scout Reservation for (Cub Scouts) and Boy Scouts, after selling Camp Onway in 2007.

Organization

The council has five districts:

  • Aquila District
  • Greater Lowell District
  • Lone Tree District
  • North Essex District
  • North Shore District

Program and activities

Services provided by the Yankee Clipper Council include training for volunteer leaders, a website, and abundant programs for Scouts of all ages. At the headquarters in Haverhill, YCC employs eight professional field staff members and four support staff members who work to maintain nearly 300 Scouting units. Scout Shops are located at both of the service centers for purchasing uniforms, BSA publications, equipment and advancement awards. The service centers are open for record keeping and program support. The main office is at 36 Amesbury Road, Haverhill, MA and the second at 189 North Main Street, Middleton, MA. The council's camps at Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation and Lone Tree Scout Reservation are supported by volunteers for year-round maintenance and operations. At each of the camps there are two part-time resident Camp Rangers. The YCC provides support of Chartering Organizations to maintain high quality Scouting programs. Liability insurance is provided for all volunteer leaders and chartering organizations. The Yankee Clipper Clipboard is the council newsletter and is published 4 times annually. [1]

The council was recently recognized by the National Council and the Northeast Region for growth in Scoutreach program in the city of Lawrence. Over 200 Scouts achieved the rank of Eagle Scout in 2007, the largest in Council history.

The council has an Eagle Scout Association which holds an Eagle Recognition Banquet that honors Eagle Scouts from the prior year through November. The banquet program is conducted by Eagles from each district and concludes with a keynote address from an interesting guest speaker. Any Eagle Scout registered in the Yankee Clipper Council who is a member of the Council Eagle Scout Association and under the age of twenty-one can apply for a scholarship from the YCC Eagle Scout Association. The scholarships are given to assist the student in his first year of college.[2]

Many editions of the Yankee Clipper Council strip (uniform arm patch) have been made. They range from updated versions of the original, where spokes were added to the wheel totem for incoming districts and to issues for several national jamboree contingents, religious events and FOS fundraiser sets. [1]

Camps

Camp Onway

Camp Onway was a camp of the Yankee Clipper Council from 1930 to 2007.

Lone Tree Scout Reservation

Lone Tree Scout Reservation
File:Lone Tree Scout Reservation.png
LocationKingston, New Hampshire
Founded1946
RangerWil Dinsmore
Website
www.ltsf.org/

Lone Tree Scout Reservation is a 125.1-acre (506,000 m2) camp in Kingston, New Hampshire on Country Pond; it currently hosts the council's Cub Scout camping program.[3].

From 1946 to 1994 Lone Tree Scout Reservation served as a residential summer camp for Boy Scouts during the summer season. Since 1994, the reservation has served as the Council's Cub Scout camp and continues to serve as a camping location for both Cub and Boy Scouts troops from September to June.

The Yankee Clipper Council holds many training sessions, including Wood Badge, Order of the Arrow events and district camping events at the Reservation throughout the year.

The reservation was purchased by the Lone Tree Council in September 1946,[4] with the proceeds from a World War II Boy Scout paper drive and the sale of Camp Lone Tree in Deerfield, New Hampshire. Camp Lone Tree was a 75-acre (300,000 m2) camping facility owned by the Lone Tree Council from 1928 to 1946.[5]

Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation

Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation
File:Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation.png
LocationNorthwood, New Hampshire
Coordinates43°12′36″N 71°14′29″W / 43.21000°N 71.24139°W / 43.21000; -71.24139
Founded1937
RangerTom Lothian
Website
www.wahtutca.ne

Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation (WTCSR) is an overnight Boy Scout camp located in Northwood, New Hampshire. The camp belonged to the Greater Lowell Council until that council joined Yankee Clipper in 2000. Wah-Tut-Ca is on over 250 acres (100 ha), including frontage on Northwood Lake. Wah-Tut-Ca is a Native American term meaning "For Friends and Brothers".[6] The camp was founded in 1937.

Camp Wah-Tut-Ca offers an open program and a wide variety of activities for scouts to choose from. The areas at the camp include the Waterfront, COPE, Climbing, Sports, Frontier, Discovery, Handicrafts, Shooting Sports, Project Green, and the Trading Post. Each area is staffed by trained scouts who teach merit badges and scout skills to help scouts advance through the ranks of Scouting.

The Wah-Tut-Ca Senior Staff is made up of camp alumni, often National Camp School Certified, including many Arrowmen from Nanepashemet Lodge #158. Every summer, they return home to manage the summer camp program for the many resident campers. Junior Staff members include veteran campers and staffers from Lone Tree Scout Reservation, Camp Onway and WTCSR. WTCSR Camp Staff is a rare group, owing to its youth and the fact that they run a very successful camp.

In the spring of 2007 the Key Foundation, an Order of the Arrow support group, published Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation.[7] It is the first national publication of the history of a Scout camp.[8]

Nanepashemet Lodge

Nanepashemet Lodge
File:Nanepashemet Lodge.png
Founded1993
Lodge ChiefRobert "Bobby" Patterson
Lodge AdviserMichael Bryant
Staff AdviserBrian Arenella
Website
http://www.yccbsa.org/oa/index.htm

Named after Nanepashemet, translated as "New Moon", was the mighty Indian chief of the Aberginian (Massachusetts) Federation. Nanepashemet Lodge, of the Order of the Arrow, Scouting's National Honor Society, was founded in 1993 from the merger of Shingebis Lodge, Passaquo Lodge, and Amiskwi Lodge. In 2000, Wannalancit Lodge was merged with Nanepashemet Lodge. The codfish was chosen as the lodge totem as it represented the economic life-blood of Massachusetts, in particular the Gloucester and Cape Cod regions. The time when codfish swim north is during the new moon which holds significance as "the start or the beginning".

Boy Scouts of the Yankee Clipper Council are elected into the Lodge by their troop members. They are chosen, exhibiting the traits of honor campers, by their peers and must be recommended by their Scoutmaster. In order to be considered for election, adults under 21 and all scouts must have achieved the First Class rank or higher. All members must have experienced at least 15 nights of Boy Scout camping within the past two calendar years, including one, but no more than one, long term camp of 5 or 6 nights. The remaining 9 or 10 nights must consist of overnight, weekend or other short term camping. Cabin camping is not counted. The Order of The Arrow is a unique organization because the body of its membership is elected from outside of the lodge.

[9] The lodge provides service to the camps and programs of the Yankee Clipper Council. This is conducted through work projects during induction weekends, fellowship campouts and special events such as the Arrow of Light weekend and the Webelos Woods program. The Lodge also hosts fellowship events, conclaves, training events, an annual family banquet and supports the council activities at Council run events. The lodge ceremonial teams bring flair to other events at the council district and unit level. Many Lodge members, youth and adult, are active staff members of both Scout and Cub Scout Camps.

The Lodge is also involved in support of the Council's Friends Of Scouting program and also sponsors scholarships for the summer camp programs and training events. The Lodge publishes a newsletter, the Codzilla Chronicles, available by mail or online to its paid membership, which currently number over 300. Returning or transferring members from the OA can be reinstated by paying this years and last years dues to the Lodge. Adult members must be registered Scouters with Yankee Clipper Council.

In 2008 and 2009 the Lodge earned the National Quality Lodge status. On August 1-6, 2009 the lodge sent a 25 member contingent to the National Order of The Arrow Conference (NOAC) held at Indiana University. The 2009-2010 Lodge Chief is Bobby Patterson and his Vice Chief is Zach Ryan. Nanepashemet Lodge is part of the NE-1A section of the Order of the Arrow.

The lodge is currently undertaking a significant service project: the renovation of the Earl D. Collins Council Ring at Lone Tree Scout Reservation and the Clayton Lane Stockade at Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation. Both are named for former lodge advisers. The main feature of the renovation will be matching gateways at both camps. Substantial completion is set for June 2010.

At the annual lodge meeting in May 2010 Cameron Anstey was elected to serve as the Nanepashemet Lodge Chief for 2010-2011. Cameron will be sworn into office on July 28, 2010 at Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation and officially assume the position of lodge chief on August 1st.

Former lodges — Present chapters

Shingebis Lodge

Named after the famous American Indian, Shingebis, who appears in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Song of Hiawatha, Shingebis Lodge #490 was founded in 1953 and served North Essex Council #712 (1925-1993), Lawrence, Massachusetts, and Camp Onway for 40 years. Wannalancit Lodge #451 conducted the first ceremony to begin Shingebis Lodge in 1953. Shingebis' totem, the loon, was always found on Onway Lake or Koo-Wah'ing before an Ordeal. In 1993 Shingebis merged with Amiskwi #505 and Passaquo #539 to form Nanepashemet Lodge #158. Shingebis Chapter of Nanepashemet Lodge – (North Essex District) now serves the Scouts residing in Andover, North Andover, Methuen, and Lawrence. [2]

Wannalancit Lodge

Named after Chief Wonalancet or "Wannalancit", who was a sachem or sagamore of the Pennacook people, Wannalancit Lodge #451 joined Nanepashemet in 2000 as a result of the merger of the Greater Lowell Council # 238, with the Yankee Clipper Council. Greater Lowell Council chose to merge with Yankee Clipper Council over three other adjacent councils. The totem of this lodge was the turtle, named "Tommy". In 1951, the lodge was chartered to serve Camp Wah-Tut-Ca. This lodge now forms the Pawtucket Chapter of Nanepashemet. Before the OA was adopted, Camp Wah-Tut-Ca had the Wah-Tut-Ca Braves, an honor camper society.

Several of the lodge's arrowmen have given rise to The Key Foundation which was incorporated in December of 1987 by a group of former lodge officers of Wannalancit Lodge #451. The idea for the foundation was gained from the 1986 National Order of the Arrow Conference.[10] For the joining of Nanepashemet, Wannalancit Lodge chose to become Pawtucket Chapter and begin anew in the lodge that they chose. The Pawtucket Chapter of Nanepashemet Lodge – (Greater Lowell District) serves the Scouts in Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Dunstable, Lowell, Tewksbury, Tyngsborough, Westford and Wilmington. [11] The Pawtuckets were a tribe of American Indians that hailed from the south side of the Merrimack River. [3]

Passaquo Lodge

[12] Named after Passaquo, a Pentucket American Indian, [13] the place name meant that he hailed from the north side of the Merrimack River, Passaquo Lodge #539 was formed in the spring of 1959 to serve the youth of Lone Tree Council, #746. This society of honor campers was created to serve Lone Tree Scout Reservation in Kingston, New Hampshire. Passaquo was a signer of the deed to the land of Pentucket, now Haverhill, Massachusetts, which included the old region named "Timberlane" just to the north in southern New Hampshire, extending to a point in the town of Hampstead. The first induction ceremony was conducted by Passaconaway Lodge from the Daniel Webster Council of New Hampshire, at Camp Carpenter, to help start the lodge in early summer of 1959.

The first Lodge Flaps were white with red-embroidered border and presented, one per lifetime to Brotherhood members, restricted, and not to be traded, sold or given away. The fully embroidered blue flap is believed to be from the early 70's and had a new eye color for each version until 1993, with a brown eye. The neckerchiefs were restricted as well, featuring the triangular patch on red material, with earlier neckerchiefs having white with red tip or split from tip to long side of red and white sides. The earliest was a home made version with red rickrack sewn on bed linen. From 1969 to 1972, the lodge was divided into two chapters; Whittier and Chain Bridge.

In 1969, the Pentucket Indian Dancers, dance team was started and later performed center stage at the 1971 World Jamboree, in Japan.

The former Passaquo Lodge lives on after the merger of the Yankee Clipper Council and is now a Chapter of Nanepashemet Lodge of the Yankee Clipper Council. Several of the lodge's arrowmen have given rise to the Lone Tree Spirit Foundation, a benefactor of the Lone Tree Scout Reservation. The Passaquo Chapter of Nanepashemet Lodge – (Lone Tree District) serves the Scouts residing in Amesbury, Georgetown, Groveland, Haverhill, Merrimac, Newbury, Newburyport, Rowley, Salisbury and West Newbury, Massachusetts, and those in Atkinson, East Kingston, Hampstead, Kingston, Newton, Plaistow, Seabrook and South Hampton, New Hampshire. The totem of the chapter remains the cock Pheasant in flight of the original lodge. [4]

Amiskwi Lodge

According to a copy of the original lodge charter, the lodge was officially founded on July 22, 1953. The name, meaning "beaver" of Algonquin dialect, was picked because the young candidates were working like "busy little beavers" during the first induction of September 1953.[14] Their newsletter started in 1964 was called "Beaver Chips". Amiskwi Lodge #505 [5] was started at Norshoco Scout Reservation in Alfred, Maine, the former lodge of the North Shore Council and subsequently the North Bay Council.

When these councils merged, Winnipurkit Lodge (Winnepeuket) [15] of Bay Shore was inactive, so Amiskwi became the lodge of the new North Bay Council. North Bay Council had four districts: Masconomet, Ironworks, Quapar and Cape Ann. In 1966, Bay Shore Council merged with the North Shore Council to form the North Bay Council #236 (1966-1993).[16] North Shore Council’s camp was NorShoCo Scout Reservation in southern Maine. In 1966, the lodge absorbed Winnepurkit#158, and in 1993 the lodge merged with Shingebis#490 and Passaquo #539 to form Nanepashemet#158. [17] The lodge's totem is the beaver. This former OA Lodge had three chapters, first Cape Ann from 1959-60 and then Abnaki and Agawam chapters to handle the influx of new members from 21 communities during the 1966 merger.

The induction ceremonies were then alternated between Norshoco Scout Reservation and Indian Pond Scout Reservation, after this period until the 1971 Area 1-G Section Conclave, where effort concentrated on moving camp equipment to Indian Pond. The last ceremony of May 1979, ended and camp equipment was transferred to Boston Minuteman Council's T.L. Storer Scout Reservation in Center Barnstead, New Hampshire. Despite camping and doing service projects at TL Storer for 8 more years, the lodge had minimal contact with King Philip Lodge#195. In the spring of 1988, the last OA weekend was held at TL Storer and then the lodge served at Camp Onway in Raymond, New Hampshire with Shingebis Lodge #490, and then merged into Yankee Clipper Council in 1993.

The Amiskwi Chapter of Nanepashemet Lodge – (North Shore District) serves the Scouts of Beverly, Boxford, Danvers, Essex, Gloucester, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester, Marblehead, Middleton, Rockport, Salem, Topsfield, and Wenham. Their totem remains the beaver of the former lodge.

Winnepurkit Lodge

This lodge took on the name of Nanepashemet’s son. Winnepurkit (Winnepeuket) Lodge #158 began in 1939 in the Bay Shore Council formerly located in Lynn, Massachusetts.[6] The Winnepurkit Lodge totem was the thunderbird. In 1966, Bay Shore Council merged with the North Shore Council to form the North Bay Council. [16] During that time, due to being inactive, the lodge was disbanded in favor of choosing Amiskwi as the continuing lodge. From the early date of charter, Winnipurket may have been an honor camp association, prior to national adoption of the Order of the Arrow, such as the Wah-Tut-Ca Braves. Several commemorative patches of the former lodge were created to serve as placeholders in OA patch collections. [7]

Bay Shore Council owned Indian Pond Scout Reservation (Camp Waskeche) located on the side of Indian Pond Mountain in Orford, New Hampshire and Camp Nihan in Saugus, Massachusetts. The plaques at Camp Nihan mention that at one time each community was a district in Bay Shore Council. In 1966, Amiskwi Lodge absorbed Winnepurkit#158, when Bay Shore Council merged with the North Shore Council to form the North Bay Council #236. Fittingly, this lodge name (and number) was given new life as a chapter in the new lodge in 1993, when Amiskwi#505 merged with Shingebis#490 and Passaquo #539 to form Nanepashemet#158.

Winnepurkit Chapter of Nanepashemet Lodge – (Aquila District) serves the Scouts of Lynnfield, Lynn, Peabody, Saugus, Swampscott, Nahant and Winthrop. Their totem remains the thunderbird of their original lodge.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.yccbsa.org/aboutus/whoweare.htm
  2. ^ http://www.yccbsa.org/eagles/index.htm
  3. ^ http://www.yccbsa.org/aboutus/properties/q&a_ltsr_0406.pdf
  4. ^ Book 1059, Page 146 NH Rockingham County Deed
  5. ^ Monday, July 15, 1929 Amesbury Daily News article/ LTSF Archive copy
  6. ^ The Key Foundation, Inc. (2007). Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation. Images of America Series. Charleston: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-4978-9.
  7. ^ The Key Foundation, Inc. (2007). Wah-Tut-Ca Scout Reservation. Images of America Series. Charleston: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0738549789.
  8. ^ The Key Foundation
  9. ^ http://www.oa158.net/index.html
  10. ^ http://www.keyfoundation.org/about-us.htm
  11. ^ http://www.oa158.net/Chapters/chapters.html
  12. ^ "Our Lodge History" by members of Lodge 539 1975/ LTSF Archives
  13. ^ http://www.scouting.org/Media/LOS.aspx
  14. ^ The History of Amiskwi Lodge #505 By Donald A doliber, Sr. /LTSF archives
  15. ^ http://www.oaimages.com/158a.shtml?tn=1&tt=
  16. ^ a b http://archives.lib.state.ma.us/actsResolves/1966/1966acts0477.pdf
  17. ^ http://www.oaimages.com/505.shtml