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The section below is found in the OA hanbook. This has been edited
to mantain the significance of mystery in OA.
The Order of the Arrow was founded to serve a useful purpose: causing
the Scout Promise and Law to spring into action in all parts of
the nation. To this day,OA and WE are dedicated to this high purpose.
The order is a thing of the individual rather than a thing of the
masses. The principles of brotherhood, cheerfulness, and service
spring to life in each of us. What each Arrowman does counts toward
the success we have as an organization.
The Order is a thing of the outdoors. It was born in an island
wilderness. It needs and is nurtured by the sun and the rain, the
mountains and the plains, the woods, the waters, and the starlit
sky.
From life in the wilds comes a precious ingredient that our country,
and any counctry needs to survive- self-reliance, making us strong
in times of stress. One of the Order's greatest achievements is,
and will continue to be, the strenghtening of the Sjcouting movement
as an outdoor experience.
Dr. E. Urner Goodman, Founder of OA, once said:
The Order is a thing of the spirit rather than of mechanics.
Organization, operational procedures, and all that go with them
are necessary in any large and growing movement, but they are
not what counts in the end. The things of the spirit are what
count:
Brotherhood- in a day when there is too much hatred at home and
abroad.
Cheerfulness- in a day when the pessimists have the floor and
cynics are popular.
Service- in a day when millions are interested in getting or grasping,
rather than giving.
While the Order's role includes service to Scouting on a national,
regional, sectional,and local level, it is our own council that
needs us most. The Order is not an end unto itself, but is for
a higher purpose.
The Order of the Arrow was founded during the summer of 1915
at Tresure Island, the Philadelphia Council Scout camp. Treasure
Island was part of the Original land grawnt given to William Penn
by King Charles II of England. The camp was located on a 50-acre
wooded island in the Delaware River between new Jersey and Pennsylvania,
30-miles upriver from Trenton and 3 miles from Point Pleasant.
Historical records show that it was an early camping ground of
the Lenni Lenape or Delaware Indians.
In May 1915, a young man named E. Urner Goodman was selected to
serve as summer camp director of Treasure Island. Another young
man, Carroll A. Edson, was appointed assistant director in charge
of the commissary. Both men were 24 years old.
Goodman had been a Scoutmaster in Philadelphia and had considerable
experience in Scouting and camping. Edson was a graduate of Dartmouth
College and had also been in Scouting for several years. After their
appointments were announced, they spent many hours together planning
their summer camping season, and both did considerable reading and
research to better prepare themselves for their new responsibilities.
Among the books Goodman read, several were about camping. One of
these that impressed him the most, a book dealing with summer camp
operation, contained a description of a camp society that had been
organized at a camp to perpetuate its traditions and ideals from
season to season. Goodman and Edson agreed that they wanted to establish
a similar society at their camp. They wanted som dinite form of
recognition for those Scouts in their camp who best exemplified
the spirit of the Scout Oath and Law in their daily lives. Since
the Delaware Valley was rich in Indian tradition, and the island
had been used in early times as an Indian camping ground, it seemed
only natural to base this society, this brotherhood, of honor campers,
on the legend and traditions of the Delaware Indians.
Shortly after it had been announced that he was selected to serve
as assistant camp director, Carroll Edson went home for a weekend
visit. During that visit, he attended a meeting where Ernest Thompson
Seton, Chief Scout of the Boy Scouts of America, was speaking. Seton
described how, when organizing an earlier youth movement called
the Woodcraft Indians, he had much success by utilizing American
Indian ceremonies at camp. This crystallized Goodman and Edson's
idea of using the lore and legends of the Delaware Indians in their
new brotherhood.
As a result, they prepared a simple yet effective ceremony that,
in turn, led to the organization of what was later to become known
as the Order of the Arrow. It was agreed from the beginning that
the procedures and programs of the organization were to be based
on the ideals of democracy. In their initial decisions, Goodman
and Edson relected those ideals by planning to elect members into
the first lodge from the troops encamped at Treasure Island.
Thus, from the beggining, a unique custom was established in that
members were elected by non-members. There has been no change in
this since that time. The original name, Wimachtendienk, Wingolauchsik,
Witahemui, was suggested by Horace W. Ralston, a Philadelphia Scouter.
Ralston and Horace P. Kern had done most of the research on the
Delaware Indians.
Soon after camp opened, Goodman explored the island in order to
find the most appropriate setting for the ceremonial ground. He
selected a site in the south woods of the island, far removed from
the ordinary activities of camp, and Edson agreed that it would
be an ideal spot. It was considerably off the beaten path, and because
of its location was an excellent site.
The site chosen was a natural amphitheater formed by a ravine in
dense woods. There was a clearing with sloping ground on one side,
which lent itself well to spectator seating. The site was cleared
of brush and a path cut through thick underbrush from the camp to
the site.
Friday, July 16, 1915, dawned bright and clear on Treasure Island.
In addition to the heavy heat that often hangs over the valley of
the Delaware, there was something else in the air. It was an almost
indescribable feeling of expectancy and mystery. By sundown the
air was charged with a tense excitement.. Those who were present
always remembered the first induction into what is now known as
the Order of the Arrow.
As darkness fell, the campers were lined up in single file by Harry
Yoder, who acted as guide and guardian of the trail. In total silence
the campers followed the guide by a roundabout route through the
woods to the site of the council fire. The path led down a small
ravine across which lay an old fallen tree. The boys were unaware
that they were approaching the council fire until suddenly it was
revealed. It was built in a triangular shape. Behind it, in long
black robes, stood the cofounders of the Order of the Arrow- E.
Urner Goodman, Chief of the Fire, and Carroll A. Edson, Vice-chief
of the Fire. The Chief of the Fire wore on his robe a turtle superimposed
upon a triangle, denoting leadership, and the Vice-chief of the
Fire wore a turtle without the triangle.
The tests of the Ceremony then are different then they are now.
There were three lessons taught that night:
- The candidate attempted to encircle a large tree, individually,
with out-stretched arms. Having failed, he then was joined by
several of the brothers wh together had no difficulty encircling
the large tree.
- The candidate was directed to endeavor to scale a steep bank
at the edge of the council ring. Failing in this, he again was
assisted by the brothers with whose help he was able to climb
the elevation.
- A third test was given, but is similar in form to one that we
use currently. For those who haven't seen the arrow, it is only
right the mystery of OA be kept.
In the first year, 25 members were inducted into the Brotherhood.
Many of the members wore a black sash with a white arrow on it.
The black sash was used because it offered an excellent contrast
to the white arrow. In the original plan there wre two degrees or
honors; the first was much like a combination of the Ordeal and
Brotherhood memberships, and the second was an early version of
the Vigil Honor.
To peretuate the brotherhood, a membership meeting was held on
november 23, 1915. George W. Chapman, the first lodge chief of Unami
Lodge served as chairman of the organization committee. This meeting
marked the first formal founding of the Order of the Arrow. Goodman
and Edson served as advisers to the committee.
By 1917, news of the organization, Wimachtendienk, Wingolauchsik,
Withahemui, spread to other Scout camps and inquiries began. Goodman
spoke to many interested Scouts and Scouters, and as a result, lodges
were established in New Jersey, Maryland, new York, and Illinois.
From 1915 until 1921 the Order of the Arrow grew slowly. World
War I kept Scouts and leaders busy with many other jproblems and
projects. In 1921 steps were taken to establish the Order on a national
basis. The early years had produced sufficient experience to form
a foundation on sound basic policies.
The first national convention was held on October 7, 1921, in Philadelphia
at which a national lodge was formed, composed of four delegates
from each of the local lodges. This group adopted a constitution
and statement of policies. Committees were appointed to develop
plans for making the Order effective as a national honor campers'
brotherhood.
Following the convention there was a steady growth in lodges and
membership. In 1922, after the national lodge meeting at reading,
PA, the Order of the Arrow became an offcial program experiment
of the Boy Scouts of America.
Several years conventions of the national lodge were held annually.
After 1927, they were held at two year intervals. During the Philadelphia
convention of 1929, it was suggested that the Order become an offcial
part of the Boy Scouts of America, and a component of its own program.
At the session of the national lodge in 1933, held at the Owasippe
Camps of the Chicago Council, this proposal was made and ratified
by the delegates.
On June 2, 1934, at the National Council Annual Meeting in Buffalo,
NY, the Order of the Arrow program was approved by the National
Council.
In May, 1948, the Executive Board, upon recommendation of its Committee
on Camping, officially integrated the Order of the Arrow into the
Scouting movement. The Order's national lodge was dissolved and
supervision shifted to the Boy Scouts of America.
The Executive Committee of the national lodge became the National
Committee on the Order of the Arrow, a subcommittee of the National
Committee on Camping and Engineering, and a staff member was employed
as national executive secretary. In the 1974 reorganization of the
Boy Scouts of America, the National Order of the Arrow Committee,
became a subcommittee of the National Boy Scout Committee.
The growth of the Order of the Arrow throught the years has never
been based on an aggressive promotional plan. It came about because
councils believed in the ideals expressed by the Order and voluntarily
requested that lodges be formed. The soundness of providing a single
workabale honor camper's brotherhood, rather than many, is evident.
More than 1 million Boy Scouts and Scouters have been inducted into
the Order during the past 83 years. There are now more than 175,000
active members.
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