Interview with Summit Vice Chief Jake Wellman

Posted on August 7th, 2007 in Legacy Interviews,OA,Podcasts by Roy

I’ve conducted legacy interviews with some long-term Scouters but realized that we can also learn much from our younger members as they create their own legacy. Here is the first of my ‘youth’ legacy interviews.

I recently served on staff of the 2007 National OA Conservation and Leadership Summit held at Indiana University. The OA membership includes some of our best and brightest young men in the country. I had the pleasure of serving under Summit Vice Chief (SVC) Jake Wellman of Yah-tah-hey-si-kess lodge 66 out of Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Jake shared some of his Scouting background both in Ini-to lodge 324 in Georgia and lodge 66 as well as his experiences serving on a National Leadership Seminar staff in Far East Council in Tokyo, Japan. I am struck by the incredible opportunities Scouting offers to young men and the impact that Scouting can have on developing tomorrow’s leaders. Even at his young age Jake got to see and experience another country and US Scouts living overseas.

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Interview with OA Historian Ken Davis

Posted on August 7th, 2007 in OA,Podcasts by Roy

Ken Davis is a long-time member of the OA National Committee from the Southern Region. He came onto the committee as the first Regional Chairman for the Southeast Region in 1974. He has a Ph.D. in history and was tapped to write a book on the history of the Order of the Arrow.

Now in its third edition, we caught up with Ken at the recent National OA Conservation and Leadership Summit. In the following video podcast Ken discusses how he came to write this book and some of the surprises he came across in doing his research for this book.

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We picked up some copies of his book that he graciously autographed and we now have on sale. Here’s a peek inside.

Book cover of The Brotherhood of Cheerful Service

2007 World Jamboree Site Visit Comments

Posted on August 2nd, 2007 in Jamborees by bshelley

I asked friend and recent Silver Buffalo recipient Dr. Hal Yocum his observations from his recent visit to the 2007 World Jamboree. Here’s what he had to say.

Hi Roy,

I was in England for 12 days. Went to Brown Sea Island, Gilwell Park, BP House, and the Jamboree. I went with Dennis Downing and wife, Kelly Williams & son and Ron Boller.

The jamboree site, Hylands Park at Chelmsford, was a small site compared to Fort A. P. Hill. The central area of Headquarters, Trading Post, bank, etc was no bigger than one of our sub-camps. The sub-camps were scattered around it in an area no bigger than at most 3-4 more sub-camps. So overall – SMALL AREA. Security that they all talked about was essentially non-existent. No screening at all, just slow check-in. Some trading, mostly at the Badgers tent area. So called “one day visit only” a joke. I believed it and we only had tickets for one day. But they were letting people come back sort of as often as they wished. OUT OF JAMBO every day by 4:30.

From a collector ‘s stand point, almost everything was/is on the website. Brown Sea, owned by the Nat. Trust of Great Britain, had some items for sale only there. They are Centenary patches for the most part. There was a patch issued on arrival -1 per participant- that appears to be a bit smaller and thinner, flat embroidery, with what Kelly called a thin LAZER CUT border. Most of the participants had the patch in the catalogue already on their shirts. Only saw two of these “1 per” patches and did not get a chance to compare closely it with the 2 in catalogue. Maybe different, not sure. 

We could go anywhere. I went right to my local troop site. Staff area was separate and way to the back. Long walk! The Badgers displays and the British exhibit were the best. British had the most unbelievably detailed set of displays on the ’57  WJ- just everything including “all the paper”.

No activity areas at the site. They were all at Gilwell and Brown Sea – off-site.

I toured all the National exhibits rather rapidly. Then I went back and toured some in detail. I went to the one sub-camp where the local scouts and leaders were.

 

I met lots of nice people and made good contacts. Met the lady recently appointed to the National OA Committee, Kay Trick from lodge 343 in central Pa. She is very nice and well experienced. She knows her stuff and can hold her own.

Next WJ is in Sweden 2011.

Hal


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