(Originally posted to social media on December 20, 2023)
My old friend Steve Warren just posted a story in the BRMC Scouting History about the fact that Troop 50 was shutting down in Roanoke, Virginia. This is the scout troop that I joined way back in 1963 when I turned 11 years of age. I think that somehow I had convinced myself that the troop would be around forever and a day.
When I joined the troop it was thriving and active and large and growing and it was like a living thing.
I am haunted by the faces of all of those scoutmasters and leaders who played such a prominent role in my life. Bill Mason, Bob Davis, Whitey Whitehurst, Gus Gaines, Pat Patterson, Don Allison, even my own father was an Assistant Scoutmaster for a while. Each one of these men had a positive impact on the lives of hundreds of kids who came through that troop over the years. We always camped at Cherokee campsite in Camp Powhatan. It was always on the first week of camp and those memories inspire most of the stories that I post on this page almost everyday. Bill Mason’s ashes are scattered in that campsite and I can still imagine him standing along the creek catching native trout. Bill founded the troop in 1960 and I doubt that he anticipated all of the challenges Scouting would face over the next 60 years.
Scouting gave me something that is hard to define. It was a tangible sense that I could do anything I set my mind to. I was not inspired by school or church or sports — but in the Boy Scouts, by God, I was a natural. I went from being a scrawny , skinny kid to a man in the blink of an eye, and I made thousands of friends along the way. I was senior Patrol Leader for a few years and I earned Eagle by the time I was 17. I worked at Powhatan as a staffer from 1968 to1978. Best years of my life.
But in the beginning was the troop. We went somewhere each month to camp. I barely survived some of those early trips. You could actually read a newspaper through my first sleeping bag, it was very thin and it was cold in those days. I learned to cook in self defense because I knew that the gruel from the Bat Patrol was fatal on many different levels. I developed skills and I grew tall and I moved out into the world at 18. But strangely I got a full time job working for the Boy Scouts of America as a Camp Ranger. It was all I ever dreamed of. I retired after 36 years and after all of those Powhatan summers and it all started in troop 50.
Thanks for the memories, it was a great ride….
(Copyright by John Hankins; all rights reserved. Published here by permission of the author.)



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