Start with Eagle Scout
Suburban Living: To build a man of integrity, character, start with Eagle Scout
Ruth Ann Dailey
June 05, 2008
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A few topics pop up over and over for reporters covering the suburbs: zoning squabbles, school board
conflicts and property taxes.
These bottomless fountains of contention could make reading the daily newspaper a depressing slog,
if we weren't trying so hard here in Post-Gazette World to bring you word of the uplifting, the
inspiring and the good. We turn out a steady stream of articles on students' academic achievements,
sports triumphs and musical productions -- as well as news of projects that various charitable souls
have undertaken to make their community or yours a better place to live.
I was going back over some of these stories the other day when it struck me that a great many of the
charitable projects had a single thing in common: Eagle Scouts.
It could be a kind of "duh" moment: Community service? Building stuff outdoors? That's just what Eagle
Scouts do.
But when you consider the sheer scope of these kids' good works and the power inherent in their
quietly accumulated number, attention must be paid.
More important, when you read what the Scouts' community partners have to say about them, it makes
you stop and think about how good character is built. That's something that lasts even longer than
the wood and wire of all their projects.
Last week's North edition carried a story on handicapped-accessible, raised garden beds designed for
therapeutic use at The Woodlands Foundation, and it was right there in the photo caption -- "built
as an Eagle Scout project" by Eric Sinclair, 17, of Bradford Woods and Troop 81.
Just three weeks earlier, an article on Patrick Eger's senior project at Thomas Jefferson High School
-- arranging a Pirates game outing for eight nursing home residents -- mentioned that he'd also helped
his older brother Christopher construct a gazebo at a Mt. Lebanon retirement home as -- you guessed
it -- an Eagle Scout project.
An April 24 story reported that Troop 181 in Ross has nine -- count 'em -- nine Eagle Scouts as current
members. In recent years, the troop's Eagle Scouts have, among many projects, erected a gazebo at an
elementary school, worked as camp counselors, built benches, put in electrical outlets and poured
concrete pads for nearby public parks.
Ross parks and recreation director Pete Geis said, "There is not enough time in the day for me to tell
you all that Eagle Scouts have done for Ross parks."
And so it goes, in virtually every borough and township, week after week. What would community life
be like without these people committed to giving so much?
I don't come from a Scouting family; all we did, besides school, was church and music. Lots and lots
of church and music.
I begged my mom to let me try Brownies, the Girl Scouts' branch for young girls, when a friend at
school was doing it, but that lasted barely a year. Keeping track of uniforms and badges and "flying
up" ceremonies was too much for my preoccupied parents to handle.
But my husband's family squeezed Boy Scout obligations in with their church activities, fife-and-drum
corps and endless outdoor pursuits. Although only his older brother made Eagle Scout, Andy's habit
of always having a pocket knife handy -- of always being prepared -- prompted me a few years ago to
start calling him "The Boy Scout." And I say it admiringly, not mockingly.
I was surprised to find out quite recently that some of my husband's colleagues call him the same
thing. The Scouts just seem to turn out a certain kind of man with a capable, honorable, can-do spirit
that stands out at any age.
That's because it starts at an early age. A mid-April article profiled a young Scout in Ross who hopes
to collect 5,000 cans of food for the needy by the time he makes Eagle Scout. He's already gathered
and distributed 2,421 cans, and he's only 12 years old.
Stories like these make me wish it weren't about 10 years too late to get my sons involved. And no, it
doesn't bother me a bit that the Boy Scouts of America is a boys-only organization.
Women can participate as Scout leaders, and girls can join two different Boy Scout programs as well as
their own Girl Scout branches, like my short-lived Brownie experience. I think society has come full
circle from gender exclusion, to inclusion, to realizing that some gender-specific experiences can be
very valuable to children's healthy development.
And the evidence of Scouting's value to society's overall health is all around us. The stories just
keep on coming.
One Pittsburgh-area Eagle Scout has just raised $75,000 to build a home with Habitat for Humanity in
Katrina-ravaged New Orleans. You'll see the details soon in these pages.
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