The First Eagle Scout
Here's a great speech for any scout or civic group. Originally delivered at an Eagle Scout ceremony. About 840 words. Six minutes. Feel free to use this without attribution.
When Robert Baden-Powell stepped off the ship in New York harbor in
January 1912, he must have been pleased by what he saw.
Baden-Powell, for those who don't know, was a British war hero and
author of a series of pamphlets entitled "Scouting for Boys". Five
years earlier, in the summer of 1907, he gathered 22 boys from every
class of British society for a nine-day campout at Brownsea Island,
off the southern English coast. His aim was to see if his concept of
Boy Scouting would actually work.
And it did! The scouting movement quickly spread throughout England
and, soon, across the Atlantic. Where it flourished ...
... as Baden-Powell noticed as he walked down the gangplank, on
which 40 uniformed boy scouts stood at attention in two columns; one
on either side.
Baden-Powell stopped to greet each boy, asking each his name and
rank. But Baden-Powell's face "lit up", according the one account,
when he stopped at the last boy in line and noticed the youngster's
large, gold-colored first-class pin and the many badges on his
sleeve. Baden-Powell grabbed the boy's hand and asked about his
merit badges. The boy, a modest fellow who rarely spoke about his
accomplishments, turned red with embarrassment as the founder of the
Boy Scout movement continued to address him while the official adult
welcoming committee could only stand and wait.
Whatever Baden-Powell said must have inspired the tall 16-year-old.
Because seven months later that young man became our nation's first
Eagle Scout.
Arthur Rose Eldred was born in New York in 1895. His father soon
died, and Arthur was raised by his mother in Oceanside, on Long
Island. Arthur's scoutmaster was actually his older brother, Hubert,
who started Boy Scout Troop 1 in November 1910. The meetings were
held in the family's barn. Each boy earned the money for his
uniform, which made Troop 1 one of the first to be completely
uniformed. Which was why they were among those chosen for the honor
guard that greeted Baden-Powell.
Like today's Eagle Scouts, Arthur earned 21 merit badges: Civics,
Cooking, Cycling, Electricity, Firemanship, First Aid to Animals,
Gardening, Handicraft, Horsemanship, Interpreting of French, Life
Saving, Painting, Pathfinding, Personal Health, Poultry Farming,
Public Health, Swimming, Chemistry, Dairying, Business, and
Plumbing.
Think about it, scouts: You're told that Scouting has taught the
same values for 100 years. And, as you can see, scouts have earned
many of the same merit badges for 100 years. Good things never go
out of style. Remember that.
In the same month that Arthur earned his Eagle, he rescued a fellow
scout from drowning and was awarded the BSA Honor medal.
Arthur graduated from Cornell, where he ran track and cross-country,
and served aboard a US Navy submarine chaser in World War I. As a
county agent in the 1920s he was credited with establishing the
Atlantic City municipal market for farm products.
"Once an Eagle, Always an Eagle." That tradition started with the
first Eagle. Arthur volunteered in the scouting movement long after
he was a scout. He was a board of review examiner and chairman of
his son's troop committee. He was elected to his county's council
the local and regional school boards. He promoted produce
transportation for the Reading Railroad and later became manager of
the Motor Carrier Committee of the Eastern Railroad Association, a
position he held until his death in 1951.
More than two million scouts have followed Arthur Eldred and earned
their Eagle. A recent Wall Street Journal column expressed it
beautifully: "What they have in common is that they chose a life of
achievement and assumed leadership roles at a very early age."
If you sum the hours devoted to all of those Eagle Scout projects
over the years, it becomes the single greatest youth service
initiative in history. If you sum the individual lifetime
accomplishments of those two million men who set the example and
distinguished themselves, it explains why the United States will
remain the greatest nation on earth for the next 100 years.
Here's something else they had in common: At age 10 or 11 they were
handed a verse to memorize. Which they did. And learned from it. And
lived it. Here's the verse:
On my Honor
I will do my Best
To do my Duty
To God and My Country
To Obey the Scout Law
To Help Other People at All Times
To keep myself Physically Strong, Mentally Awake and Morally
Straight.
(pause)
Goodness begets greatness.And that
never goes out of style.
This ceremony is not only to honor the accomplishment of
__________, our newest Eagle Scout, but also to give each of you
scouts a chance to learn from the example that Arthur Eldred and
_________ have set for you.
(Turn to the Eagle Scout)
___________, let me be the first to say:
you have some very big shoes to fill! And, judging from what I've
heard about you, there's no doubt that you will!
Notes: The verse at the end is the Scout Oath,
easily recognized by anyone who's ever been a scout.The 12 points of
the Scout Law are Trustworthy,
Loyal, Helpful, Friendly, Courteous, Kind, Obedient, Cheerful,
Thrifty, Brave, Clean and Reverent.The Wall Street Journal
Article Op-Ed is dated August 1, 2012.The history of Arthur
Eldred and the account of Baden-Powell's arrival were derived from a
well-researched article found on
eaglescout.org.The
definitive Baden-Powell biography and a history of the scouting
movement's origin can be found in William Hillcourt's
The Two Lives of a Hero.