Chief Seattle Council

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Chief Seattle Council
On the Pacific Northwest Trail.jpg
OwnerBoy Scouts of America
CountryUnited States
Membership40,000+
Website
http://www.seattlebsa.org/
 Scouting portal

Chief Seattle Council (originally called Seattle Area Council) is the local council governing the scouting activities of the Boy Scouts of America in a large part of the Puget Sound and Seattle area, including almost all of the Olympic Peninsula.

Organization[]

The council is divided into districts:

  • Alpine District: Its territory includes Issaquah, North Bend, Sammamish, Renton Highlands, and East Bellevue.
  • Aquila District: Its territory includes West Seattle, Burien, Normandy Park, SeaTac, Des Moines, Tukwila, and Vashon Island.
  • Aurora District: Its territory includes north Seattle, Lake Forest Park and Shoreline
  • Cascade District: Its territory includes Bellevue, Mercer Island, and North Renton
  • Foothills District: Its territory includes Maple Valley, Auburn, and Black Diamond
  • Green River District: Its territory covers primarily the areas of Kent and Renton.
  • Mount Olympus District: Its territory includes Port Angeles, Sequim, Port Townsend and other parts of Clallam and Jefferson Counties
  • North Lakes District: Its territory includes Bothell, Kenmore, and Woodinville
  • Kitsap District: Its territory includes Bainbridge Island, Central Kitsap, and North Kitsap Belfair, Washington|Belfair]], Bremerton, Port Orchard.
  • Sammamish Trails District: Its territory includes Redmond and Kirkland
  • Thunderbird District: Its territory includes Beacon Hill, Capitol Hill, Central Seattle, South Seattle, Rainier Valley.

Camps[]

Camp Edward[]

Camp Edward,[1] previously known as Camp Brinkley, is a camp in Snohomish, Washington. It was founded in 1967 and originally held a resident summer camp program for Boy Scouts, but has since transitioned to a summer camp program for Cub Scouts.

Camp Pigott[]

Camp Pigott,[2] (named after former Paccar CEO and philanthropist Charles M. Pigott), has run a resident summer camp program since its re-opening in 2003. It had formerly been named Camp Omache, and had been closed since 1991.

Camp Pigott sits on Lake Hughes in Snohomish, Washington. It features a 35' high-ropes course known as the C.O.P.E. course. The course is a non-linear design so Scouts can choose a variety of challenges and pathways. The camp also includes a 42' covered climbing tower with three climbing surfaces (including a real rock surface and overhang) and one, two-lane rappelling surface. Camp Pigott also has a mountain biking course and a blacksmith shop. The camp has a dining hall that is equipped with a full size industrial kitchen, and indoor/outdoor fireplace for the main hall.

Camp Pigott is home of the Order of the Arrow T'Kope Kwiskwis Lodge's ceremonial longhouse.

Camp Sheppard[]

Camp Sheppard [3] is a camp outside of Enumclaw, Washington. Sheppard does not run a resident Scout camping program, but does run several other Scout programs including a Winter Camp program for Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts. Since 2011, Sheppard has been the location for the Council's National Youth Leadership Training, usually holding four sessions every year in the summer.

Until 2009, Camp Sheppard was a High Adventure base, where it offered programs in mountaineering, mountain biking, and backpacking.[4]

Until 2014, it hosted the "Mom & Me/Dad & Me" Cub Scout camping programs, after which they were moved to Camp Edward.

Camp Parsons[]

Camp Parsons
LocationBrinnon, WA
Coordinates47.755656,-122.85676
FoundedJuly 7, 1919 (1919-07-07)
Website
http://www.campparsons.org/

Founded in 1919, Camp Parsons [5] is the oldest continuous running Boy Scout camp west of the Mississippi River and one of the oldest continually running Boy Scout camps in the United States on its original location.[6] It sits on , part of the Hood Canal, on the Olympic Peninsula, just north of Brinnon, Washington, and just south of Quilcene, Washington. The site of the camp was chosen by Professor Edmund Meany, Major Edward Ingraham and members of the Seattle Area Council. It was purchased from John Strom in May 1919 and named after the first council president, Reginald H. Parsons. Booth Hall (the current Silver Marmot Grill) was constructed in May and June 1919 and continues to be used today. On July 7, 1919, 100 Scouts arrived at Camp Parsons for its first season that ran 6 weeks and has not stopped since. A separate camp for Cub Scouts was developed on the property in 1937 and named Camp Meany in honor of the late Professor Edmund Meany, first Scout commissioner for Seattle. This camp was merged into Camp Parsons in 1941 and that camp's dining hall served as the dining hall for Camp Parsons until the summer 2014 after which it was razed and a new dining hall was constructed and dedicated in June 2015.

Thousands of Scouts from the Pacific Northwest and throughout the United States and Canada attend camp each summer. Camp Parsons is the only Boy Scout Camp that uses a salt water beach for all aquatic activities. Camp Parsons also has hiking treks for Scouts to explore the Olympic Mountains and Kayak treks to explore the Hood Canal.

Order of the Arrow[]

T'Kope Kwiskwis Lodge
T'KopeLonghouse2013.JPG
Lodge ChiefDrew Shepherd
Lodge AdvisorJohn Riekena
Staff AdvisorBill Beaumont
Website
http://www.tkopekwiskwis.org/

Chief Seattle Council's local lodge in the Order of the Arrow is T'kope Kwiskwis, founded in 1954. The name translates to '[The Order of] the Silver Marmot' and refers to the council's original honor society that originated at Camp Parsons, the Silver Marmot. Unlike other lodges around the United States, which wear the Plains Indian style of regalia for their ceremonies, T'Kope, along with neighboring lodges wears button blankets.

In April 2013, T'Kope Kwiskwis completed the reconstruction of a ceremonial longhouse at Camp Pigott that is used for Order of the Arrow ceremonies.[7]

The T'Kope Kwiskwis lodge won the 2012 OA National Service Award.[8]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Camp Edward
  2. ^ Camp Pigott
  3. ^ Camp Sheppard
  4. ^ Chuck Caley (2009-11-14), Camp Sheppard High Adventure Base, BSA, archived from the original on 2021-12-22, retrieved 2016-11-04
  5. ^ "Camp Parsons | Scouts BSA Camping | Chief Seattle Council". Camp Parsons. Retrieved 2019-07-02.
  6. ^ Eby, David L. "America's Oldest Scout Camps."
  7. ^ "Longhouse".
  8. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-12-17. Retrieved 2013-04-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links[]

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