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After the conflict had finished every man and his scout wanted to come round and have a look at the jets!!!
The Boy Scouts of Melrose Troop 68 spend the weekend at Parker Scout Reservation near Merrifield, Minnesota.
Official "Boy Scout Diary Boy Scouts of America". Small, very well worn 5 1/4" X 2 1/2" X 1/4" paperbound book of 188 pages with dates and "useful information for boys". Brown cover and back. The cover has printed sketches of scouts in action during each season, with a center medallion showing the year in center surrounded by the numbered months. "Be Prepared" and "Do a Good Turn Daily" on outer periphery. Back has a centered Boy Scout symbol.
Membership card on pg 2 lists the scout's name as Dwight Potter, 21 Pond St. Other pages for small daily diary entries (nearly all blank), a cash accounting section and useful info like knot-tying, map reading, constellations and civics law.
Donated to the MHS by the Dudley Farm Museum December 2024. Donated earlier to the Farm by Mike and Robin (Potter) Bradshaw.
ACC# TBA2024.029.004
See more info about the Dudley Farm at flic.kr/s/aHBqjBVJVN
(Photo credit - Bob Gundersen www.flickr.com/photos/bobphoto51/albums)
Scout or Scote Hall is on a small hill on the south side of upper Shibden Dale. The history of the site can be traced back to 1315 when the Stancliffe family were owners. By Elizabethan times, there were two large houses here. There is no date on the present building, but a nearby cottage has 1661 on it, and a sundial plate dated ANNO 1617. It is a large 3-storey, 52 room, four square building built and owned by the Mitchell family in the late 1600s. It has a mixture of architectural styles, from Jacobean, Caroline and Georgian to Italianate. It is thought by some to be a Calendar building - its 12 bays representing the months, the 52 doors the weeks and the 365 windows the days. By the mid-1980s, the Hall was derelict and in a serious state of decay and ruin; it was partially restored in the 1980s by local businessman Peter Mellor, but now [2003] seems to be again in a state of disrepair. It was once described by architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner, in his 'Buildings of England', as a "half derelict palace in the deserted English countryside".
The Hall is a Grade II* listed building. Nine 2- light mullioned and transomed windows to south divided into groups of 3, 4 and 2 by small, elliptical openings set in corniced rectangular panels. Central corniced doorway. Moulded storey bands. 4 windows to east return. 3 windows to west with tier of elliptical openings. Rear wing in ruins.
Boy Scouts: 9/24/66
Future Sheriff Sam Catron, his sister Nancy and their mother Jennie Morrow Rachel Catron.
Photograph taken by Jim Slaughter.
Official "Boy Scout Diary Boy Scouts of America". Small, very well worn 5 1/4" X 2 1/2" X 1/4" paperbound book of 188 pages with dates and "useful information for boys". Brown cover and back. The cover has printed sketches of scouts in action during each season, with a center medallion showing the year in center surrounded by the numbered months. "Be Prepared" and "Do a Good Turn Daily" on outer periphery. Back has a centered Boy Scout symbol.
Membership card on pg 2 lists the scout's name as Dwight Potter, 21 Pond St. Other pages for small daily diary entries (nearly all blank), a cash accounting section and useful info like knot-tying, map reading, constellations and civics law.
Donated to the MHS by the Dudley Farm Museum December 2024. Donated earlier to the Farm by Mike and Robin (Potter) Bradshaw.
ACC# TBA2024.029.004
See more info about the Dudley Farm at flic.kr/s/aHBqjBVJVN
(Photo credit - Bob Gundersen www.flickr.com/photos/bobphoto51/albums)
Yesterday was scout day here at Glimmerglass where Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts alike were invited to come enjoy a day of opera. It was a quite successful day.
-Jessica Kray
The Bonfire Yell is one of the highlights of the annual Scouting Camporee. The boy scouts and girl scouts of SFAMSC show off their talents in dance, acting, and singing as they perform their cheers and yells exulting the values of scouting and challenging the other patrols to do better with friendly jabs that help spark healthy competition. To give their very best performance, each patrol dedicate many days to choreograph and practice their yells. This activity helps develop important life skills such as cooperation, teamwork, creativity, and the strength of character to be able to perform publicly. Audiences are usually surprised so see once timid and shy students shine and give it their all in the Bonfire Yell.
Scout or Scote Hall is on a small hill on the south side of upper Shibden Dale. The history of the site can be traced back to 1315 when the Stancliffe family were owners. By Elizabethan times, there were two large houses here. There is no date on the present building, but a nearby cottage has 1661 on it, and a sundial plate dated ANNO 1617. It is a large 3-storey, 52 room, four square building built and owned by the Mitchell family in the late 1600s. It has a mixture of architectural styles, from Jacobean, Caroline and Georgian to Italianate. It is thought by some to be a Calendar building - its 12 bays representing the months, the 52 doors the weeks and the 365 windows the days. By the mid-1980s, the Hall was derelict and in a serious state of decay and ruin; it was partially restored in the 1980s by local businessman Peter Mellor, but now [2003] seems to be again in a state of disrepair. It was once described by architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner, in his 'Buildings of England', as a "half derelict palace in the deserted English countryside".
The Hall is a Grade II* listed building. Nine 2- light mullioned and transomed windows to south divided into groups of 3, 4 and 2 by small, elliptical openings set in corniced rectangular panels. Central corniced doorway. Moulded storey bands. 4 windows to east return. 3 windows to west with tier of elliptical openings. Rear wing in ruins.
OK I cheated a bit as I included my recently dropped. The strange thing is my profile widget shows 46, but when I go to Scout it shows 42! Also I notice my 2007 photos bounce in and out. Most strange is Bluebells at Glendurgan dropped out completely from number 48.
Thanks to all the people who have made the 50 possible. You know who you are ;)
1. Eyes bigger than belly?, 2. Zakynthos Coastline, 3. Bluebells at Glendurgan, 4. Sunrise at Boulmer, 5. Untitled, 6. Perranporth beach, 7. Trelissick Gardens, 8. Mullion Cove,
9. Enchanted wood, 10. Samuel wishes you a..., 11. Fence at Lindisfarne, 12. Reflections at Alnmouth, 13. Walking to Lindisfarne, 14. Jim's Whippy, 15. Cow lomo no.5, 16. Bird utopia,
17. Lodge Park, 18. My place in the country..., 19. Thou shall not pass, 20. Self, 21. Corbiere Seagull, 22. Steps to the Chapterhouse, 23. Tractor and Coble, 24. Rock,
25. Going to work, 26. This is my town, 27. Autumn impression, 28. Hodgemoor Wood, 29. Toadstool City central, 30. Days end, 31. A Capital view, 32. Parklife,
33. The prisoner, 34. Tractor at work, 35. Sheep at Castleton, 36. Country lane, 37. Pitstone Windmill, 38. Broadway tower, 39. Music temple, 40. Goats,
41. All Saints' Church, 42. Queen's Temple, 43. Music Temple, 44. Road through rape seed fields, 45. Boo, 46. Mam Tor, 47. Curbar, 48. Buttercups,
49. Wells Cathedral, 50. Sandy
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