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The History of the Order of the Arrow
By Jim Howes, Blue Ox Lodge
The Order of the Arrow is a recognized official program activity
of the Boy Scouts of America, intended to recognize those Scouts who best
exemplify the Scout virtues of cheerful service, camping, and leadership.
Founded in 1915, just seven years after the acclaimed English war hero Robert
Baden-Powell started Scouting in Great Britain, the Order of the Arrow is the
uniquely American "honor society of Scouting". The "OA's" origin and development
are tightly intertwined, like a well-made square knot, with Scouting itself in
the United States. Its history is a remarkable saga of a good-hearted visionary's effect on many generations of youth.
The new Scout movement was enjoying halcyon days in an America still at peace in 1915,
while young men in Europe were dying by the thousands in a war more terrible than any
before in history. Boys in the U.S. seemed to be donning Scout uniforms everywhere as
membership grew rapidly from coast to coast. Prominent businessmen, civic and religious
groups, and politicians, including Congressmen and the President, vied to match the
enthusiasm of boys surging into Scout camps across the nation, eager to be part of the
great wave of Scouting which had reached American shores in the years before World War I.
As E. Urner Goodman, then a 25 year old Scoutmaster, walked along Chestnut Street in
downtown Philadelphia, PA, in May, 1915, he heard newsboys hawking the Philadelphia
"Inquirer's" headlines, blaring the sinking of the Cunard oceanliner
"Lusitania" hit by a U-boat's torpedoes within view
of the Irish coast. Urner was busy with plans that would also have far reaching effects,
for he had agreed to take the job of Camp Director at the Philadelphia Scout council's
camp perched on idyllic Treasure Island in the Delaware River. What he had in mind was to
leave a lasting imprint on thousands of American youth in the twentieth century.
Urner's thoughts in 1915 were focused on development of methods to teach the
Scouts
attending summer camp that skill proficiency in Scoutcraft was not enough; rather, the
principles embodied in the Scout Oath and Law should become realities in the lives of
Scouts. As a means of accomplishing this without preaching and within a boy's interest and
understanding, he decided to launch an innovative program that summer based on peer
recognition and the appeal of Indian lore. Troops would choose, at the conclusion of camp,
those boys from among their number best exemplifying these traits, who would be honored as
members of an Indian "lodge". Boys so acknowledged in the eyes of their fellow
Scouts would form a fraternal bond joined together in a richly symbolic brotherhood.
Assistant Camp Director Carroll A. Edson helped Urner research the lore and language of
the Delaware Indians who had inhabited Treasure Island, which they combined with
characters from James Fenimore Cooper's "Last of the Mohicans", to develop
dramatic induction ceremonies for the
"Order of the Arrow", as the fledgling honor society was dubbed. Even today,
these rites make a lasting impression on Scouts who have been elected to the "Order
of the Arrow".
By 1921, the idea had spread to a score of Scout councils in the northeast and the first
national meeting of the Order of the Arrow was held. Although the OA was initially viewed
with suspicion by some Scouters as a secret society, if not an affront to the egalitarian
ideals of Scouting, legendary Chief Scout Executive James E. West permitted those councils
desiring Order of the Arrow lodges to establish them as an "experimental"
program under a "National Lodge". Not until 1948 was E. Urner Goodman's
innovation fully integrated into the Scouting program.
Having observed its Diamond Anniversary in 1990, membership in the Order had grown to
160,000 of the one million eligible Boy Scouts in the U. S., organized into almost 400
lodges nationwide. Rare indeed is the council today that does not have an Order of the
Arrow lodge with its own Indian name and "totem", or emblem.
It is evident that the Order of the Arrow has made a significant contribution to Scouting,
as we know it today in the United States. The OA's motto, "Brotherhood of Cheerful
Service", is more than just an empty slogan for many Arrowmen, who constitute a
valuable council resource for camp promotion, improvement projects, and summer camp staff. The OA, at its best, continues to
be a powerful teaching tool for Scouting ideals.
The OA helps in retaining older boys in Scouting, who otherwise often tend to lose
interest upon reaching high school age. Notably, OA guidelines place great importance on
preserving Lodge leadership in the hands of its youth members, headed by a Chief, Vice
Chief(s), and an Executive Committee, all of whom must be under age 21, who plan and
implement Lodge activities, service projects, ceremonies, publications, budgets, and
conduct troop elections as arranged with Scoutmasters. In larger councils, lodges are
often sub-divided into "chapters", with youth chapter officers and committeemen
running chapter events. At the Section, Regional, and National levels, Chiefs and
Vice-Chiefs are typically young men of college age, since Arrowmen are considered youth
members until age 21.
Adults are crucial to the OA's success as advisors and resources, such as transportation,
service project skills, and the like. Many adult Scouters find participation in the OA to
be rewarding, as they help kindle anew the spirit of brotherhood in
Scouting's honor
society.
To be inducted into the Order of the Arrow, a Scout must:
* Be at least First Class rank;
* Have at least 15 nights of camping, including a 6-day long-term camp;
* Participate in the "Ordeal" and induction ceremony, after election by his Boy
Scout troop or Varsity unit.
Each Scout troop may schedule an Order of the Arrow election once annually. In many
Councils, these elections are held at summer camp, in line with the traditions of the OA's
founding. This is not mandatory, however. All registered active youth troop members have a
vote, both current Arrowmen and non-Arrowmen. Membership selection is thus predominantly
by non-members.
While Explorer posts cannot have OA elections, a boy in an Explorer post who has dual
registration with a Scout troop (or Varsity unit) is, of course, eligible for election by
his troop or Varsity unit.
Adult Scouters may be proposed for membership in the Order of the Arrow by unit or
district committees or the Lodge. Once selected, they, too, undergo the "Ordeal"
and participate in the induction ceremonies.
To alleviate lingering concerns in some quarters regarding the ceremonial aspects of the
Order of the Arrow, the BSA has officially stated:
"The induction is not a hazing or an initiation ceremony. The Order is not a secret
Scout organization, and its ceremonies are open to any parent, Scout leader, or religious
leader. There is an element of mystery in the ceremonies for the sake of its effect on the
candidates. For this reason, ceremonies are not put on in public. The ceremonies...are not
objectionable to any religious group."
Following 10 months as an "Ordeal" member, the Arrowman may participate in the
"Brotherhood" ceremony, which signifies the sealing of his membership and an
additional emphasis on OA ideals and purposes.
After an additional 2 years have elapsed, exceptional OA leaders may be recognized by
conferring of the "Vigil Honor". Generally speaking, only two percent of the
Lodge membership may be selected each year for this highest of Lodge honors. A special
ceremony, devised by Dr. Goodman in 1915 and closely based on ancient Indian traditions,
culminates this experience.
All Order of the Arrow members are reminded that their primary duty al- ways remains to
their own troop, which elected them in the first place as a result of their cheerful
service to their fellow unit members. OA Lodge activities are intended to SUPPLEMENT, and
not REPLACE, troop activities. Probably the single most often-heard complaint directed
towards the OA program is that of Arrowmen who have forgotten this cardinal principle.
OA Lodges meet with other lodges in their sections each year and attend a nationwide
gathering held on the campus of a major university every 2 years. These National
Conferences, as they are called, feature individual and Lodge competitions in ceremonies,
Indian dancing and costumes, and sports, along with seminars and gala arena shows. More
than 6,000 Arrowmen attend, which for many is an exciting highlight of the Scouting
experience on a par with a National Jamboree.
For over a half century after founding the Order of the Arrow, E. Urner Goodman continued
to be a towering figure in American Scouting, attaining a doctorate in education and
becoming National Program Director of the BSA for many years, all the while steadfastly
devoted to the OA. He enjoyed meeting Arrowmen at his Order of the Arrow "lodge"
home in Vermont and continued to attend events held by Unami Lodge #1 in Philadelphia for
the rest of his life.
Dr. Goodman's keynote speeches were a traditional and inspiring highlight of OA National
Conferences, until his final appearance in 1979 at Colorado State University, just six
months before his death at 89. He was hailed by the 4000 Arrowmen present with a
thunderous standing ovation. He spoke movingly of his creation of the OA as a "Thing
of the Spirit" in that place... so distant in time... on the misty shores of the
Delaware River. He bade us farewell, there in the shadows of the snow-capped Rockies, with
a memorable peroration to keep the OA's flame of fellowship glowing brightly in our
hearts. Though a frail, elderly man stood before us, stooped with age, yet the spirit
borne within would truly live on in our hearts, firm bound eternally in youthful
brotherhood, wherever men strive to love and serve one another.

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