SCOUTING
AND TOMAHAWK STAFF MEMORIES
1957 - 1959
By Skip Sheldon
My whole association with
Camp Tomahawk began when Lloyd Knutson presented the Eagle Scout
award to me in February of 1956. He told my Dad about the new
rifle range being built at camp that was being named after “Dad”
Drew, who had some connection to our troop (troop 17 in St. Anthony
Park). Dad also found out that Paul Burson, who was an assistant
Scoutmaster with the troop, was trying to get certified as an
NRA instructor so he could be in charge of the Field Sports area
at camp. I was shooting on a NRA sponsored small-bore ( 22 rifles)
team at that time, so Dad arranged for Paul to take the course
he needed, and after that, one thing led to another, and I ended
up coming to camp to work on the new rifle range in 1957. I went
back for the summers of 58 and 59 also working on the rifle range,
but made a “career change” in the summer of 60 by
taking senior life guard training, so I could work as a life guard,
which I did in 61and 62. My only regrets about working at Tomahawk
are that I was so young (age 14 – 16) that I really didn’t
appreciate what a great experience it was. I was mostly the “tag
along kid” who was looked after by the older staff folks,
and usually didn’t understand what was going on. I did really
enjoy the summers, however, and looking back, believe that they
helped shape my future involvement in Scouting and developed a
good work ethic, that has served me well. Even though I didn’t
work at camp after 59, I stayed active in Scouting and helped
organize Explorer post 3 (Ramsey County Emergency Explorers) and
worked with the OA. I was an officer in the Council Explorer organization,
went to several State Explorer Conventions and attended all the
OA Conclaves.
Some of the events that stick in my mind from camp staff days
are the staff parties and tag football games following the chicken
Bar-B-Q’s on Wednesday nights. I also remember helping Lloyd
Knutson split rails for the trail to the rifle range, and “sinking”
the catamaran sail boat while trying to learn to sail. I now recall
as funny, but at the time was terrified by, the “special”
staff meetings that were called when “Burma Shave”
showed up one Sunday morning at the end of the camp directors
new Scout Law signs on the road leading into camp, and when one
of the staff was found stuck in the window of the trading post
late one night. There may have been another one when the Volkswagen
Beetle managed to get on top of the service lodge roof, but I
think even the top brass saw the humor in that. I use to try to
follow Don Kelsey on his Friday night tour of troop campfires,
where he would sing a song or two, but he had a bicycle and I
was walking, so I usually only kept up for 2 or 3 troops. Saturday
nights in Rice Lake, were a real treat, for this young country
boy, who lived too far out of town to even go to a movie at home.
We always stopped at that little café (can’t remember
the name) on the way home for burgers and a shake. Talked a lot
about the “local girls” but, at least the groups I
was with, never meet up with many.
In 1966 I graduated from the U of M with a degree in Engineering
and went to work for the DuPont Company in Wilmington Delaware.
I had been on the job about 2 weeks when my boss took me to lunch
and said he’d heard that I was an Eagle Scout with some
experience at Camp and in the Explorers. Well, it turned out his
Son’s troop had just lost their Scoutmaster, and was I interested
in becoming the new one? You don’t tell the boss “no”
after only 2 weeks on the job, so I became the Scoutmaster of
troop 63 in Wilmington Delaware in September of 66. Had a good
time and got a chance to do my first hike on the Appalachian Trail
with those boys. In January of 1970 I was transferred to Brevard,
North Carolina and thought my Scouting career would be on hold
for a while (I had a 3 month old Son, and figured that I would
get involved again when he got older). We had been “down
south” for about a year, when the church we were attending
got a new minister. The second Sunday he preached, he told us
that every church he had ever been at had a Scout troop and this
one didn’t, so “someone” was going to start
one. I didn’t say “no” fast enough, became a
Scoutmaster again, and led troop 603 for the next 15 years. During
that time the troop grew from the one boy who showed up for the
first meeting to 60 boys with a waiting list. We produced 27 Eagles
(including both my Sons), earned “50 miler” awards
5 times including both on foot and on water, and were designated
an “Honor Unit” 12 times. Along the way, I earned
the Scouter’s Key, Scoutmasters key, Wood badge beads, the
District Award of Merit, Silver Beaver Award, and became a James
E. West Fellow. I served on 3 wood badge staffs, have been on
the District Committee, Camp committee, the Daniel Boone Council
Executive committee and Council Executive Board (currently still
serving on the Executive Board). Took Adult leader training at
Philmont Scout Ranch and served on a National Jamboree Staff.
Career wise, the 5 years I planned to spend at the Brevard plant
turned into 27. I got a chance to develop some really great equipment
for manufacturing X-Ray film including machines that are still
“state of the art” in the industry, and hold several
patents on them. I earned a Masters degree (at night) from the
University of Tennessee in 1976. I’ve had the chance to
go all over the world, to scope out new machines, stat up manufacturing
plants, and help with the start-up and debugging of new equipment.
I retired in 1998 when our department was sold to a company that
I didn’t want to work for, and have been living the ‘life
of Riley” since then. I do volunteer work with a number
of different organizations including SCORE, Trout Unlimited, Ruffed
Grouse Society, Appalachian Trail Conference (We do trail maintenance
every Friday), YMCA, a number of community committees, and of
course, Scouts. The wife and I travel extensively (I think the
“country count” is approaching 35), and have a great
time with the Grandkids ( 2 boys, a girl, and hoping for at least
one more). I started a little consulting business when I retired,
mostly so I could write off some expenses, but have mostly closed
it down, because it started to become too much like work again.
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