Eagles and Arrows
Home Up

Email

 

Site Map

A Few Hints:  Use the Site map to go from web page to web page.  Use "Find" ("control" key  plus "F" key) to get a window in which you can type a word or number that you want your computer to find for you on a web page.  Highlight a part of a web page and use the "selection" option in print window (select "File" at the top left of the screen and then select "Print") to print the highlighted part of the web page.

Most of the pages on this web site contain historical information about the development of the families of the people of the United States of America.   No one person can claim credit for all of the research which has been required to collect the data which I have analyzed and am disseminating on this web site.  Other than my personal research, inherited information which my parents researched, and sometimes information from the books of the Sigler Family Organization edited by Robert Howard Sigler and Gregory L. Watson, I have given credit for my sources.  If an author does not give credit to his or her sources then the author not only takes credit for the source's correct information but also for the source's mistakes.  That would be unfair to both the source and the author.  This is our history and is meant to be read and disseminated by anyone who desires to do so.  However, if material from this web site is copied, printed, and/or published on other web sites, in books, or in research papers it would be very much appreciated if I and this web site were given credit as being the most immediate source for the material. A link to this web site would also be appreciated.

 

This Web site is no longer being updated.  To go to the Site Map for the updated new Sigler Web Site site map click on the link below.

New Sigler Web Site site map.

 

 

 

This Web site is no longer being updated.  To go to the updated site for the new Eagles and Arrows page click on the link below.

http://williesigler.com/dads-eagles.htm 

 

Eagles and Arrows

Hit Counter

 

From a rustic narrow valley in southern Ohio to a cool dark evening sitting on a Pennsylvania hillside with thousands of others listening to the president of the United States, who was only a couple of hundred yards away, I had many experiences as a boy scout which became permanent influences on what I would become and what I would do for the rest of my life.

 

My first contact with the boy scouts was during the late 1950's in the valley of Camp Creek, Ohio, after my tenth birthday.  The  only youth organizations available in the isolated valley were 4H for the girls and a boy scout troop for the boys.  I was too young to officially be a boy scout, but the older young men taught me and another ten year old young man the requirements for the Tenderfoot rank and some of the requirements for the Second Class and First Class ranks.  Camp Creek was a community out in the middle of nowhere.  Young men could earn the first three ranks, but it was very difficult for them to advance to the higher ranks due to the lack of availability of merit badge councilors.

 

During the summer before my eleventh birthday, my family moved to Paducah, Kentucky.  Several of the young men in my neighborhood were members of a boy scout troop sponsored by a Methodist church a few miles away and I was invited to join the troop.  It was official ..... I got my uniform and, before long, passed the tests for and was presented with my Tenderfoot badge.  I collected coat hangers door to door in my neighborhood to earn money for my first summer camp during the summer of 1960 at the new boy scout camp on Kentucky Lake.  I was a member of that troop during the sixth and seventh grades.  My training in Camp Creek paid off handsomely and before the summer at the end of my seventh grade year,  I was a Star Scout with eight merit badges. 

 

The Methodist church decided  to stop sponsoring a boy scout troop at the end of the school year and our neighborhood group found another troop sponsored by a Baptist church a little bit closer to home.  The scoutmaster was a city police officer and lived in our neighborhood.    Although I was only in the troop a short time, I attended another summer camp, earned five more merit badges, and became a Life Scout at the age of twelve before starting the eighth grade.

 

BSA Insignia-100.jpg (13587 bytes) The Baptist church decided to stop sponsoring a boy scout troop a few months after I joined it.  However, our innovative scoutmaster kept his ear to the ground and found a new sponsor for our troop.  The Paducah Junior Chamber of Commerce had recently built a large meeting hall adjacent to the city park.  They decided to sponsor a boy scout troop and we were chosen to be their troop.  I was a member of that troop for five years from my eighth to twelfth grades.  Our sponsor provided us with a place to meet and all of the equipment that we needed.   Our troop had open enrollment and soon grew to eight patrols.  At that point, a waiting list was started.  We had several assistant scoutmasters and the scoutmaster and most of the assistants had military backgrounds.  After the end of my junior year of high school I had earned ten more merit badges and I was certified as an Eagle Scout.  I was elected to the Order of the Arrow by the members of my troop and became a Brotherhood member of the organization and was a member of the Indian dance team.  I rose through the offices of the troop to become a Junior Assistant Scoutmaster while my scoutmaster rose through the ranks of his career to become an Assistant Chief of Police of our city.     

 

 Some of the rich folks had summer homes on the lake.  I had a boy scout camp on the lake.  About a year or two before I joined the boy scouts, the old Four Rivers Council opened a camp on the shore of Kentucky Lake.  It was on a small bay which was protected from the main lake by a long narrow island.  I attended two one week summer camps and numerous one and two night campouts at the camp.   During the summers of 1960 and 1961, I attended the one week camps as a member of a troop.  Then, during the summers of 1962, 1963, and 1965, I was chosen to be a member of the camp staff.  That meant an all expense paid six week encampment at the camp.   The first year I was a member of the camp development crew and was something like an outdoor janitor.  We were the buildings and grounds people and collected the garbage left over from the meals which the campers prepared at the campsites.  The second and third years I was a member of the commissary crew.  We alternated between two functions.  One function was to distribute the uncooked food and instructions to the patrols at the campsites and the other function was to prepare the the meals for the other thirty or forty members of the camp staff.  I was paid $2 per week the first year, $5 a week the second year, and $10 a week the third year.....just a little bit of spending money.  During the summer of 1964, I attended the national jamboree and my only time spent at the camp was in a pre-jamboree camp with the jamboree troop.