Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Capitol Area Council

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Capitol Area Council (#564)
HeadquartersThe Frank Fickett Scout Training and Service Center12500 North IH 25
Austin,Texas 78753
LocationCentral Texas
Founded1912
PresidentMarietta Scott
Council CommissionerMani Kuruvila
Scout ExecutiveJon Yates
AffiliationScouting America
Website
www.bsacac.org
 Scouting portal

Capitol Area Council is a501(c)(3) and local council of theScouting America, that serves Scouts and Scouting volunteers in 15Central Texas counties surroundingAustin.[1][2]

The council oversees programs inBastrop,Blanco,Burnet,Caldwell,DeWitt,Fayette,Gillespie,Gonzales,Hays,Lavaca,Lee,Llano,Mason,Travis, andWilliamson counties.

History

[edit]

The firstEagle Scout west of the Mississippi, was reported to be inShiner, Texas.[3][4]

The first troop in the Austin area was founded in 1911.[5][6]Capitol Area Council was founded in 1912 as the Austin Council.[7] In 1924, the name changed to the Austin – Travis County Council, then the Austin Area Council.[8][9]

In 2011, the council headquarters moved from the intersection ofUS-290 andUS-183 to its present location in North Austin.[10][11] The new location has 3100 sq ft of staff offices, training & meeting facilities and a Scout Shop.[12]

February 8, 2025, the 115th anniversary, of BSA, the national council changed its name to Scouting America. The Scout Oath, Law and program remain unchanged.[13]

Camp Tom Wooten (1934–1983)

[edit]

In 1934, 125 acres of land on the banks ofBull Creek near theColorado River in west Austin, was bought and given to the council.[14][15] The land was turned into Camp Tom Wooten, named after Tom D. Wooten, the son of Dr. Goodall Wooten, who made the purchase and donation.[16][17] In 1998, the camp was sold and the funds were used to purchase Lost Pines Scout Reservation onLake Bastrop from theLower Colorado River Authority.[18]

Organization

[edit]
BSA Councils in Texas

The council is organized in to 12 districts that are aligned with Central Texas counties and local independent school district boundaries.[19][20]

  • Armadillo District
  • Bee Cave District
  • Blackland Prairie District
  • Chisholm Trail District
  • Colorado River District
  • Hill Country District
  • Live Oak District
  • North Shore District
  • Sacred Springs District
  • San Gabriel District
  • Thunderbird District
  • Waterloo District

Camps

[edit]

Order of the Arrow - Tonkawa Lodge No. 99

[edit]
Tonkawa Lodge #99
TotemThunderbird
Founded1936
Lodge ChiefColin D
Lodge SecretaryLogan W
Vice Chief of InductionsRoman D
Vice Chief of ProgramOwen M
Vice Chief of PublicationsVacant
Website
https://www.tonkawa99.org/
 Scouting portal

Tonkawa Lodge is theOrder of the Arrow Lodge for Capitol Area Council. It was first chartered by the National Council on January 20, 1937, by Joe Lindsay Jr. and Joe Lindsay Sr., Tonkawa Lodge #99 started as Tejas Lodge but was later changed to Tonkawa in 1938 with lodge 72 already having the name.[31] Tonkawa Lodge had one of its members become theOrder of the Arrow National Chief in 2011, Jonathan "Bunker" Hillis.[32][33][34] Currently Tonkawa Lodge #99 has 12 Chapters that are aligned and named with the Districts of the council.[35]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Boy Scouts of America - Capitol Area Council".Boy Scouts of America - Capitol Area Council. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  2. ^"Boy Scouts of America - 564 Capitol Area Council".
  3. ^"Obituary of William Elmo Merrem".www.westtexasscoutinghistory.net. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  4. ^Reporter, Rye Druzin rdruzin@vicad com (2016-04-06)."103 years of Eagle Scout tradition".The Victoria Advocate. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  5. ^"First Troops in Texas during 1911".www.westtexasscoutinghistory.net. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  6. ^"About Us – Troop 1 – Austin". Retrieved2024-10-22.
  7. ^AUSTIN COUNCIL, AUSTIN AREA COUNCIL AND CAPITOL AREA COUNCIL CAMPS PATCH ISSUES AND CAMP HISTORY 1911- Present(PDF). RICHARD SOUTH & TE STARR. Austin, Texas. 2014.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  8. ^"Happy 112th Birthday, Capitol Area Council! | North Shore District".nsdbsa.org. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  9. ^"Media & Press Inquiries".Boy Scouts of America - Capitol Area Council. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  10. ^"Obituaries in Austin, TX | Austin American-Statesman".statesman.com. 2024-09-03. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  11. ^"Boy Scouts of America, Capitol Area Council".Solomon's Porch - Connected in Mission. 1970-01-01. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  12. ^KXAN (2011-09-01).New Boy Scout training center opens. Retrieved2024-10-22 – via YouTube.
  13. ^"Boy Scouts see a small membership uptick after rebrand to Scouting America".AP News. 2025-02-06. Retrieved2025-04-25.
  14. ^"History | Wooten Elementary School at Webb MS".wooten.austinschools.org. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  15. ^"The Courtyard Neighborhood".www.westaustin.com. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  16. ^"History | Wooten Elementary School at Webb MS".wooten.austinschools.org. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  17. ^Association, Texas State Historical."Wooten, Goodall Harrison".Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  18. ^Denney, Richard (2021-06-29)."Camp Tom Wooten on Bull Creek".Travis County Historical Commission Blog. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  19. ^"About CAC".Boy Scouts of America - Capitol Area Council. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  20. ^"Districts".Boy Scouts of America - Capitol Area Council. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  21. ^"Boy Scout Camp (Told Through Quotes)".Field Ethos. 2022-08-11. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  22. ^Ramirez, Luis (2018-06-27)."Boy Scouts Attend Summer Camp at Lost Pines Scout Reservation".Blanco County News. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  23. ^Inquirer, Special to The (2010-10-28)."Waterfront dedicated to Lawrence Gindler".The Gonzales Inquirer. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  24. ^Wendell, Bryan (2022-03-18)."Divine Nine Wood Badge course aimed at training more Black Scouting leaders".Aaron On Scouting. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  25. ^Association, Texas State Historical."Sanders, Mary Lavinia Griffith".Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  26. ^"Camp Alma McHenry--More information".www.usscouts.org. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  27. ^"Camping @ Alma McHenry by Giddings? - TexasKayakFisherman.com".www.texaskayakfisherman.com. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  28. ^Bailey, Todd (Oct 26, 2020)."Capitol Area Council's first female board president reflects on career; offers COVID-19 updates".
  29. ^Garcia, Dacia (2024-09-16)."12 events in Cedar Park, Leander, Liberty Hill Sept. 19-Oct. 20".Community Impact. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  30. ^"Roy D. Rivers Wilderness Camp--More information".www.usscouts.org. Retrieved2024-10-25.
  31. ^"Tonkawa Lodge #99 - The Tonkawa Story".www.tonkawa99.org. Retrieved2024-10-22.
  32. ^News."Hillis '13, Top Eagle Scout, Meets President Obama - Carleton College".www.carleton.edu. Retrieved2024-10-23.{{cite web}}:|last= has generic name (help)
  33. ^"Order of the Arrow - Indian Summer 2011".event.oa-bsa.org. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  34. ^"Local Eagle Scout Meets House Speaker John Boehner".KUT Radio, Austin's NPR Station. 2011-02-14. Retrieved2024-10-23.
  35. ^"Tonkawa Lodge #99 - Chapters".www.tonkawa99.org. Retrieved2024-10-23.

External links

[edit]

Capitol Area Council, Boy Scouts of America website

Organization
Advancement and recognition
Leadership, training, and awards
People
Events
Other
Issues
National Service Territories and councils
Locations
Scouting organizations
Scouts-in-Exile
Scout-like organizations
Non-sectarian
Sectarian
Historical organizations
Other organizations
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Capitol_Area_Council&oldid=1322580399"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp