To Valent-
A small token of Friendship and Good Will-- From—Troop 169, Denver, Colo. Japanese Buddhist Church
Also nailed to the board is a 1940-50s era Assistant Scoutmaster patch, a light blue Air Scout patch, two National
Jamboree patches, one for the cancelled 1935 Jamboree and a canvas 1950
Jamboree pocket patch. Ranging down the left side of the panel is a series
of felt and twill patches for camporees held in 1947 and 1948, and two patches
for Camp Ki Shau Wau, a Chicago area
camp owned by the Starved Rock Area Council. The last summer camp program at
CKSW was held in 1976 but these two camp patches have been identified as from
the1947 time period. At the bottom of the column is a felt 1948 Chicago Council Round-up patch.At the
bottom of the right column is a triangular felt patch for a 1946 Camporee in the Corn Belt Council, another Boy Scout
council in Illinois that eventually merged with the W.D. Boyce Council.
Camp Ki-Shau-Wau was a former Boy Scout camp
owned by the Starved Rock Area Council (and later by the W.D. Boyce Council
after the merger in 1972) located one mile east of Lowell, Illinois along the
Vermillion River. The last summer camp program was held in 1976. The camp
opened in the 1920s and was sold in 1989.
Down the
right side of the board is a 1951 felt Otschodela
Council Jamboree Circus patch, a dark blue felt Crumhorn Mountain B.S.A. for 1948 or 1949 (the same patch was used
for both years), a generic green felt Trail
Builder patch issued to Crumhorn Mountain campers who helped bushwack out
the camp’s first hiking trails, and a green and white felt Crumhorn Mt. Camp B.S.A. for 1951.
Seemingly out of place with this group is a Troop Eleven Hackensack (NY?) twill patch.
Crumhorn Mountain Camp in south
central New York was established in 1948 on Crumhorn Lake, in the Town of
Maryland near the Otschodela Council’s headquarters in Oneonta, NY. After the
war ended in 1945, it soon became apparent the old Camp Deerslayer on Otsego Lake did not meet the requirements of the
expected increase in camp attendance. The
camp at Crumhorn Lake, with one name change in 1989 to Henderson Scout Reservation, still serves the council’s campers
today.
Down the
center of the panel is a collection of 1940-50s era red-on-khaki and
brown-on-dark green community strips, mostly for central New York communities:
Red-on-khaki:
HYNDSVILLE, SCHENVUS, ONEONTA, HACKENSACK (NJ), SIDNEY, IDAHO SPRINGS
(CO), LAURENS, BINGHAMTON, FALL RIVER
(ME), MIDDLEBURG, RICHMONDVILLE.
Brown-on-dark green: SOUTH EDMESTON, NEW BERLIN, SIDNEY
One curious
note: The patches that have been carefully removed by pulling the tacks with a
small upholsters’ tack puller tool reveal penciled names underneath: “John”
underneath the 1935 Jamboree patch, “Walley” under the 1950 Jamboree, and “Hank”
under the Troop Eleven Hackensack patch. Curious to see if the name Valent
appeared under the Assistant Scoutmaster patch, we carefully removed the tacks
to find penciled “Scouts of America!”
Panel #2, 1950s Era Travel Decals
Souvenir
travel decals are a part of America's automotive vacation and touring history.
They were made and sold by the untold millions during the Golden Age of highway
travel--1945-1970. Today, they have virtually disappeared. While not exactly Boy Scout memorabilia like
on the first panel, their bold graphics and variety make them highly
collectible today. (Actually, many Boy Scout patch manufacturers in the 1950s
and 60s also supplied decals from the same designs.)
The second panel displays a
collection of 18 1950s era travel decals from Wyoming, Nebraska, Iowa,
Missouri, Colorado and the San Antonio Zoo, including a topless Shy Anne pinup (“Cheyanne,” get it?)
promoting Cheyanne, Wyoming’s world famous “Frontier Days.” If girls dress like
this redhead during Frontier Days in Wyoming, it must be an unforgettable sight
at the rodeo. Two of the decals are
triangular Conoco Touraide logos, which also appears on a Nebraska Conoco
Touraide decal featuring the towering State Capitol at Lincoln, Nebraska. We did not try to soak off any of the decals
to see if there were any penciled names underneath.
Check out Lost
Highway Art Co. at losthwyart@aol.com, where you
can find out much more about travel decals like the ones found on our plywood panel.
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