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Bidding Information
Lot #    23275
Auction End Date    4/28/2009 11:32:00 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Scouting and the Jewish Boy
City    New York
Publisher    Jewish Committee on Scouting/Boy Scouts of America
Publication Date    1943
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Three issues of this title (58p, 66p.,54p) illus. 203:137 mm., light age staining. Very good copies bound in the original paper wrappers.
          
Detailed
Description
   Three issues (1943, 1949, 1954) of a booklet entitled "Scouting and the Jewish Boy: the scout program in synagogues, community center and other Jewish organizations". The booklets give an overview of the scouting program and highlight the some specific items and ideas unique to the Jewish scout. These include the Ner Tamid award, ideas for Boy Scout Sabbath services, programs for Jewish holidays, etc.

On February 8, 1910, William Boyce founded the Boy Scouts of America. The BSA was later chartered by the United States Congress in 1916. During the early years of the movement, Boyce looked for financing to sustain the organization. Later in 1910, Boyce met with Mortimer Schiff, a prominent Jewish financier, and William Mitchell, the national president of the YMWHA (Young Mens and Womens Hebrew Association). Both men thought that Jews and Jewish institutions should be involved in the movement based on a similar program run by Lord Baden-Powell in England.

In 1911, Schiff donated $4,800, joining Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller as the first major contributors to the BSA. Schiff was a Vice President of the BSA from 1910 until 1931 when he was elected President. He died later that year and his family recognized his passion for the Scouting movement by donating the Schiff Scout Reservation and National Training Center in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

In 1913, the first Jewish troop was formed at the 92nd Street YM-WHA in New York City. With the support of William Mitchell, the National Council of YMHAs created a "Scouting Committee". Jewish Scouting continued to find support nationwide. In 1926, the National Jewish Committee was formed and later chartered by the BSA National Council. That same year the first Silver Buffalo Awards (the highest recognition that the National Council can bestow on its volunteers) were presented to Schiff, Baden-Powell, and several other early stalwarts of the movement.

Membership in the Scouting movement continued to grow and by 1957, 1,367 troops were chartered to Jewish religious and fraternal institutions throughout the United States. There were an estimated 100,000 Jewish Scouts registered in both Jewish and non-Jewish sponsored Scout troops. Later, the Committee recognized the substantial contributions of Frank L. Weil, one of its co-founders who served as its Chairman from 1935 to 1957, by naming two awards in his honor. The first is the "Quality Jewish Committee Award" and the second is the "Unit Recognition Award". A scholarship in his name is also administered by the Committee.

          
Reference
Description
   http://www.jewishscouting.org/historyofthecommittee.asp
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:    Checked
  
Location
America-South America:    Checked
  
Subject
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    English
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica