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Growing Girls: The Natural Origins of Girls’ Organizations in America

12:04 am in GS Books by

Product Description
In the early years of the twentieth century, Americans began to recognize adolescence as a developmental phase distinct from both childhood and adulthood. This awareness, however, came fraught with anxiety about the debilitating effects of modern life on adolescents of both sexes. For boys, competitive sports as well as “primitive” outdoor activities offered by fledging organizations such as the Boy Scouts would enable them to combat the effeminacy of an overly civilized society. But for girls, the remedy wasn’t quite so clear. Surprisingly, the “girl problem”―a crisis caused by the transition from a sheltered, family-centered Victorian childhood to modern adolescence where self-control a… More >>

Growing Girls: The Natural Origins of Girls’ Organizations in America

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Girls Scouts growing, gearing for centennial

12:06 pm in Girl Scout News by

Girl’s sweat leads to sweet ride to prom
Boy meets girl. Boy asks girl to prom. Girl provides ride for the date, a 1957 Chevrolet that she restored. It’s a classic American story that started over a year ago.

Read more on The Janesville Gazette

Oklahoma Girl Scouts Awarded In Weekend Ceremony
Girl Scouts from across eastern Oklahoma gathered to celebrate earning the top awards in Girl Scouting.

Read more on News On 6 Tulsa

Girls Scouts growing, gearing for centennial
RALEIGH, N.C. — In 2007, when it was formed through the merger of Girl Scout councils based in Raleigh and Goldsboro, Girl Scouts – North Carolina Coastal Pines spent 84 cents of every dollar in its budget on programming.

Read more on Philanthropy Journal

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Boy Scout troops growing locally after long decline

11:27 pm in Boy Scout News by

Girl Scout Leader Accused Of Taking Cookie Money
A Girl Scout troop leader is accused of swindling her troop and chapter of more than $8,000 that was generated, in part, by the sale of Girl Scout cookies.

Read more on WCCO Minneapolis – St. Paul

Boy Scout troop 727 recognizes seven Eagle Scouts
Boy Scout Troop 727, who is sponsored by St. Martha Catholic Church, honors and recognizes seven members for earning the rank of Eagle Scout Feb. 27

Read more on Kingwood Observer

Boy Scout troops growing locally after long decline
URBANA – When he was still in school, Bob Meyer remembers Boy Scout events where dozens of tents were packed in long straight lines, and the sheer number of scouts that packed the campgrounds made it look like something out of a movie.

Read more on Springfield News-Sun

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Growing Up With My Mother Flora

11:14 pm in Boy Scouts by

As I just noted, I raised chickens from an early age and when I got a part-time job on a nearby dairy farm as a teenager I paid for the chicken feed. We sold the extra eggs and I let my mom keep the money for herself – a small token for all she did for me.
My menagerie of living things during my teenage years included chickens, rabbits, pigeons, hamsters, goldfish, turkeys and ducks. We also raised a pig or two each year.
I still loved gardening, flowers, small fruits (especially strawberries), and vegetables. Because I either did it myself or assisted my dad with our little farm, my mother made whatever I wanted to eat especially deserts. Angel Food Cake (made from twelve egg whites) was always accompanied by a Sponge Cake (made from the twelve egg yolks) and later the two batters were swirled together to make a “Daffodil” cake. I loved her pies especially apple, strawberry rhubarb, custard and raisin! Her homemade fudge of every kind disappeared in a day or two especially with three kids who all liked it.
All of my 4-H Club members loved it when meetings were at my house because of the refreshments my mother served.
My mom did everything for our family; she even polished all our shoes! I loved her dearly and her mother, Gram King, also.
My dad was a meat and potatoes man, tough roast beef and steak, ham roast pork, fried crisp salt pork, chicken turkey (on holidays), organ meats like liver, beef heart and chicken’s feet. He also favored smoked beef tongue, pickled lambs tongues and pig’s hocks and pickled eggs!
My dad was a great and supportive father who drove me to all my events too far to walk of bike to. I was in Boy Scouts, 4-H Club and events, Church (Altar Boy), and took tap dancing lessons from the Mooney’s in Northampton and in my teens I joined Easthampton Grange.
Dad built all the housing for my animals. He would not allow me to learn any practical carpentry skills, (but I did learn some because I watched him), because he and mom, neither of whom had finished High School, had decided that their first born son was going to college. My dad would yank a hammer out of my hand when I attempted to do some building work. “You’re going to school, boy!”
I loved my dad, but as a youngster I was also afraid to buck him because if I did. I got a “backhander” in an instant. This was not a frequent occurrence but I always had a long memory and the few times I got a “backhander” made me leery of telling him anything that might earn me another one.
So, I clung mostly to my mother for emotional support. She was always there with a big hug as was my grandmother. Gram saw my dad whack me once when he caught me and a couple of my friends smoking corn silk in the field across the street from our house, and she told him never to hit me again or she’d call the police. My dad told her to mind her own business, but the feud soon blew over and my dad was back to taking my grandparents wherever they needed to be driven and was very kind to them.

Bernard J. Fleury, B.A. History and Classical Languages, Ed. D. Philosophy, Government, and Administration, is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Educational Administration.

Dr. Fleury?s lifelong interest in history from the perspective of the people who lived it, is evident in Chaps. VIII & IX in A Bee in His Bonnet (website: http://greatgeneration.net) that is his grandfather Frank King?s Great Generation story as he recorded it, and told it to his daughter and grandchildren.

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