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Archive for Uncategorized – Page 2

Java Joe Coffee and Tea

Posted on March 8, 2019
by Editor

The Boy Scouts are selling Java Joe coffee, teas and more. We appreciate your support. Sale Starts March 4 to March 17 and $5 of the purchases price goes to the Troop and scouts to help offset Summer Camp fees.

If you don’t have access to your favorite Scout in person on line orders can be made through the Java Joe website https://javajoesfundraiser.com/shop/?fbclid=IwAR3bY1ieqq0CB8_uePD8KoT96uRM-IMVOAxRh4hS-ocLUUkyvg08EcJNbq8
When checking out, make sure to indicate that you are Supporting Boy Scout Troop 334 and if you want the funds assigned to a specific Scout enter his name.

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Cub Scout Pinewood Derby

Posted on January 25, 2019
by Editor
A fascinating look at the history of the Pinewood Derby
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What’s the difference between Cub Scouts and Scouts BSA (Boy Scouts)?

Posted on January 24, 2019
by Editor

Check out this informative blog on the changes in our program from girls joining to what the differences are from the Cubs level to the Scouts BSA (aka Boy Scouts) level.

https://blog.scoutingmagazine.org/2019/01/22/difference-between-cub-scouts-and-scouts-bsa/

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Women in Scouting.

Posted on December 3, 2018
by Editor

Check out this Woman in Scouting video https://youtu.be/1bSg_0MB-8o

I’m just like this mom. I am a Girl Scout, I married a Boy Scout. We both come from Scouting parents. When we had children it was a given that they would be Scouts. We were blessed with two boys before our girl and I wanted to be an active part of all their development. I became a Parent helper, Den leader, Committee member for both Pack and Troop, and took on many different responsibilities at different times when it worked for my family. During that time I bonded and grew not just with my boys, my husband, but with the other families and the men that I now call my brothers. We have been through great times, good times, not so awesome times but we are always scout family. We have taught each other, learned from each other, built up each other. Never once have they made me feel unwanted, unneeded, unaccepted. I have been on some very interesting trips, sat in on some crazy meetings, met honorable and distinguished people, had moments that only few get and have watched numerous children grow from little boys to strong men. Scouting with the boys has taught me to step outside my comfort zone (white water rafting), be open to new adventures (driving ice cream cross-country), more acceptable to things the way they are (camping in mud up to my ankles over a sewer line for six days). These things are moments and memories that will forever be a part of my story. There may never be a formal invite on a piece a of paper, or a direct ask from a leader but the leadership of both Pack and Troop 334 always welcome anyone, with any experience level, with any interest level, with any want to be a part of building TRUSTWORTHY, LOYAL, HELPFUL, FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS, KIND, OBEDIENT, CHEERFUL, THRIFTY, BRAVE, CLEAN, REVERENT citizens. COME ON, LET’S SCOUT YOU IN!

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Scrip is HERE!!!

Posted on December 3, 2018
by Editor

What is Scrip? A new way to buy Gift Cards
Shop with gift cards in everyday categories including groceries, gas, restaurants and more.

Earnings that Add Up
A percentage of each gift card purchased goes directly to the Troop.

Just go to shopwithscrip.com and sign up using the enrollment code B1DA45F2532LL, Once you set up an account you will be able to go to the family functions tab and set up your payment options. It is that easy. You can buy gift cards every month for things you know you are going to buy (like gas and groceries) and help the troop at the same time.

Attached is all the information you need to set up your account and help out the Troop. PLEASE pass on to your family and friends.

*This will be a year round fundraiser*

 

If you need assistance setting up your account click on the power point below.

SCRIP Power Point

If purchasing physical cards, as opposed to print at home vouchers, orders will be placed on the 10th of each month, cards will be sent the troop and handed out, unless your non-local then the cards can be mailed to you.

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Coupon Fundraising

Posted on November 12, 2018
by Editor

We all need to shop or one thing or another. Sometimes a need, sometimes a gift and sometimes retail therapy! What better way to feel good about shopping then to help raise funds for an awesome program that helps youth be well-rounded good citizens at no cost to you, You will actually save money! We started out our coupon fundraising with a Boscov’s event. For $5.00 donation you got a 25% off coupon to use as many times as you wish for an entire day.

On Black Friday we will begin a Modell’s Coupon event. THERE IS NO COST TO YOU. Just print the coupon from the website or Facebook or save it to your phone. Use it between Nov 23 and Dec 24th. You will get 15% off your purchase and the Troop will get 5% of the sale. The coupon is good for all Modell’s in PA, NJ and DE.

A Five Below coupon event will soon follow in December. Details will be announced once confirmed. Escript coupons will also be available in the near future. When we are set up all the details will be shared.

Just think of all those things you need to purchase on a regular basis, why not shop wise and with Community friendly companies?

If you have a company that you would like to add to our listings please feel free to reach out to Scoutmaster Dave, Asst Scoutmaster Bill or any Committee member.

 

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Fall Camping Fun

Posted on October 22, 2018
by Editor

On October 19th a group of 7 scouts and 2 adults set out for Camp Tuckahoe in Dillsburg PA. During the two hour drive there were chats about school, likes and dislikes, family, and of course a few naps. Upon (or A Pon per the boys) their arrival at cabin Poplar the group quickly unpacked, picked bunks, get comfy and hung around sharing stories and lots of laughter. After checking out the facilities they agreed that the woods were better. Yep, even our boys have standards! The night ended with a small snack of cookies and drinks than off to sleep in the little cabin in the woods. The only heat source was wood in a fireplace but honestly, it never got cold enough for that.

On Saturday, the cheery group awoke, dressed and enjoyed a breakfast of scrambled eggs and sausage in bags. The lesson here was lessening the need for clean up. Two pots of hot water and breakfast was good to go. Everyone was eager to start the day. The group loaded into cars and drove over to the https://ahec.armywarcollege.edu/ where they toured The Soldier Experience Gallery. They experienced the United States Army through the eyes of the men and women who lived its history, in war and peace, from the Spanish American War to current operations in Afghanistan. Their first stop was to pick up a “dog tag” representing one of six Soldiers whose story is part of the USAHEC collections. The dog tags help you to experience Army life as a Soldier does, learning about their Soldier throughout the gallery. The exhibit also featured hundreds of artifacts, a movie theater, and the opportunity to write a letter to a currently serving Soldier. The boys most enjoyed being able to test their marksmanship at the digital shooting range, parachuting into Normandy as part of the D-Day invasion, and experiencing a night attack during the Korean War.

“Good-Bye Broadway, Hello France” – America in the Era of World War I was a two part exhibit with artifacts, photographs, and archival materials from the USAHEC Collection tell the Soldier stories and history of the First World War. In the second part of the exhibit, items are exhibited in an in-depth and engaging battlefield landscape, providing visitors with the feeling of walking through the trenches, as they learn about the lives and experiences of Soldiers who called them home.

The USAHEC holds personal papers, photographs, artifacts, audio-visual media, and library materials pertaining to the history of the U.S. Army since its founding in 1775. These items number in the millions, and many are tied to individual Soldiers and their units. Others stand alone as symbols of the U.S. Army’s role in the history of the United States. Exhibit highlights many types of materials, collected since 1967. Objects displayed were selected due to their distinctive nature or because they provide a unique perspective on the history of the U.S. Army, as well as what Soldiers found important about themselves, their units, the people they met, and the places where they served. Several unique immersive experiences, such as a “spider hole” and “booby traps,” which allow visitors to experience, first-hand, the types of challenges U.S. Soldiers faced. Each Soldier’s story is unique, and the exhibits showcase different areas of Vietnam, with corresponding Soldiers’ stories to illustrate the experiences of the men and women who served. In-country experiences in combat and medical evacuation operations will be featured, in addition to sections relating to the experience of POWs and veterans upon returning home. The exhibit also includes the short film, “Our Journey Through War,” which was produced in-house by the USAHEC team, and features the stories of those who were involved in the conflict.

This immersive experience is designed to be a touch-point for current Soldiers and veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as to enlighten the general public. The boys got to see what appears to be a portal in the hallway and as they enter, they will note they are in a portion of a military cargo plane. As they exit the “aircraft”, they will hear the sounds of military aircraft and see on both sides, expansive photos of the tarmac and images of Soldiers proceeding from the planes with their gear. Soldier cutouts add depth to the display, while a video monitor displays rotating images of Soldiers arriving in theater. Proceeding through the hallway, they noticed the sky over the Middle East above them, and further down the corridor, a display of gear as it was stowed. To the left, a warning sign on the door (in Arabic) that tells them they cannot enter. Moving through a small doorway, the boys entered the second portion of the exhibit and could hear Soldiers voices, while seeing images of Soldiers speaking to each other and receiving briefings. A wall mounted video monitor showed images of Soldiers receiving orders or waiting to be briefed, while an existing window with an inserted graphic of the desert reminds visitors of where they are. At the end of the hall there was a large wall graphic that creates the optical illusion of a much larger space.

The final leg of the indoor tour On Patrol builds off of experience of Soldiers arriving in theater, as is presented a hallway exhibit. Immersive and interactive, On Patrol provides a glimpse of Soldiers’ performing their duties in country. It showcases their experiences “outside the wire,” during the conflicts of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. The uniforms displayed on mannequins and large format photographs of each area help define the period, and the experiences of Soldiers deployed to both areas. Though the uniforms featured in the exhibit are tied to specific years, the experiences of patrolling through rural Afghanistan or urban Iraq resonate for Veterans of these campaigns, regardless of their dates of deployment. The exhibit concluded with a hallway of large format photos, showcasing units and families welcoming Soldiers home from their deployments.

The group took a break for lunch in the museum cafe. While patiently waiting for their lunches they privately pointed out the horrible behavior of another scout troop. There were boys sitting on the table tops next to people eating, trash and food all over the floor, their noise level was like an outside playground. Our young men sat like gentleman outside of an Army classroom full of staff and ate their lunches like proper young men. They cleaned up and left their table better than it was when they arrived.

The Army Heritage Trail serves as the USAHEC’s outdoor museum. It encompasses the grounds of the USAHEC, covering about one mile and highlights nearly every era of Army history with different exhibits and large artifacts. Designed to provide an immersion experience that allows the visitor to walk into each period represented, the Trail also serves as a stage for living history presentations by historians serving as interpreters. Fourteen individual exhibits include full scale reconstructions of a French and Indian War way station, Redoubt Number 10 from the Revolutionary War siege of Yorktown, a section of the Antietam battlefield, a Civil War winter encampment with cabins, a WWI trench system, a WWII company area, a replicated Normandy Bocage scene from World War II, a Current Operations HESCO Bastion barrier checkpoint, and an interpretation of the Vietnam helicopter air assault at Ia Drang that includes a period Fire Support Base. Additionally, there are numerous smaller exhibits featuring armor, aircraft, and artillery from several different eras of U.S. Army history. There was also an hour long competition between our boys of who could complete the Army training obstacle course!

While visiting the museum store one of the leaders had a conversation with a police officer from the near by Army Barracks. With information from him the Troop was actually able to get clearance to enter the US Army Base and War College. Carlisle Barracks is the second oldest army installation, dating back to 1745, when British soldiers created the “Camp near Carlisle.” In December 1776, the Continental Congress authorized establishment of an ordnance center at Washingtonburg, as the Barracks was called during the Revolutionary War. Carlisle Barracks is now an Installation Management Agency installation supporting the U.S. Army War College, a field operating agency of the U.S. Army, which educates and prepares military officers for leadership at the highest levels. The highlight of the base visit was the Hessian Powder Magazine, also known as the Hessian Guardhouse Museum, is a historic guardhouse and gunpowder magazine. It was built in 1777, and is a stone walled structure, lined with interior brick. It measures 70 feet by 32 feet and the walls are 4 1/2-feet thick. It has a vaulted stone roof, covered by timbers and tin to take a gable form. Tradition says that some Hessian Prisoners of war, captured at the Battle of Trenton were sent to Carlisle. They were used to build this guard house, originally a magazine. It was probably first used as a guardhouse in the 1870s and when included as part of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School (1879–1918). Afterwards, it was used as a quartermaster and medical supply storehouse, filmstrip laboratory, message center, and U.S. post office. It was designated a museum in 1948. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

Then back to the cars for a short return to camp for some free time, one group played Gaga ball and another hiked the camp. Then another less mess meal of Mr Craighead Sr pre-made meatloaf, veggies in a bag and potatoes and a trip to the camp store. While chatting with the Ranger the boys were offered free water ice pops for their walk back to the cabin. Just when they were prepared to build a fire the rain set in. So, into the cabin for unending rounds of cards and a late night snack of apple and pumpkin pie. Lights out and another great day in the books.                     

The group was early to rise, dress, pack and a quick breakfast of bagels before hitting the road for the drive home. Everyone took a chore and completed it without hesitation. During the ride home there were more rounds of cards, musical roulette and some more naps. Over all the trip was a success and everyone seemed to find fun somewhere while learning just a little.

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Tenth Annual Veterans Tribute Concert

Posted on August 1, 2018
by Editor

On Saturday July 28th the Friends of Gorgas Park and The 21st Ward Veterans Assoc along with Pack and Troop 334 welcomed World War II, Korea and Vietnam Veterans from the Coatesville Veterans Hospital and local Posts to the Tenth Annual Veterans Tribute Concert. Many neighbors and families came out on the beautiful and sun filled morning in the park to thank the men and women who gave so much of themselves for us all. The Merion Band provided their musical talents, the Philly Phanatic was in attendance for photos and fun, the Ridge Runners had there hot rods on site as well as local entertainment. We even had a visit from the Philadelphia Fire Department. Complimentary meals were provided by local businesses and families, with the addition this year of the Mission BBQ catering truck. There were a few booths set up supporting both the military and local businesses. We had a booth set up to tell people about the awesome changes coming to Scouting and to encourage families to join us. The Pack was represented by Kyler, Tyler and Jacob. Zak, Mason and Jonathan represented the Troop. As always our leadership and a few parents were running around too. Thank you Jeff and Janet Wong, Barb Watson, Fury Colubriale, Denise Mullen, Sue Wienand, Adrian Hoppel, Marisol Ramos, Heather White, Keith Humphreys, Bill and Mary Ann Dunn. The families of 334, the Friends of Gorgas Park and the 21st Ward Vets have established a wonderful and fruitful partnership bringing the community youth and adults together for a better future without forgetting the importance of our past.

(photos: Bruce Hoffman 21st Ward Vet and man who creates it all, some of our local vets, The Marion Band, Mary Ann Dunn talked her way into the truck! Sadly, no photos were taken of our recruitment booth)

            

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HAPPY 75TH BIRTHDAY

Posted on May 2, 2018
by Editor

HAPPY 75TH BIRTHDAY

On April 30th 1943 while World War II was in full swing Troop 334 was first chartered at St Alban’s Church Ridge and Fairthorne Ave in the Roxborough section of Philadelphia. Now 75 years, 70 Eagle Scouts,  6 Scoutmasters, and 3 locations later we are still going strong and serving the youth of our area!  I want to thank current and past Scouts, Leaders, Committee and Parents of the Troop for making it possible. Some people think of Scouting as just a thing to get their kids into but those who know use realize that 334 is more than just a Boy Scout Troop it is a family. Like any family nothing is perfect but we have always come together, met and overcome our changes to keep 334 going. Too many people say bad things of the youth of any given generation but few are willing to make a change…WE ARE! This is a great milestone and many troops today cannot say what we can say. Because we are so active and away from the church today visiting Philadelphia University we will be holding a 75th recognition next Monday night at our current location Leverington Church Ridge and Hermitage at 7:30 pm please come out… Past Scouts, Leaders, Committee and Parents, we welcome you. There will be special guests, messages, door prizes and short video of our troop’s history.

THANK YOU ALL

Scoutmaster Troop 334

David A. Craighead

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Eagles Giving Back

Posted on August 25, 2017
by Editor

Recently, Eagle graduates of Troop 334 have been hitting the streets in the community handing out Scout recruiting flyers and talking with neighbors about their experiences in the troop. Now more than ever our young men are in need all of the life skills and education they can encounter to get ahead in this world. Some of our most recent Eagle’s have stated how grateful they are for all they have learned during their scouting time and are confident at how well advanced they feel when they look at some of their friends who did not experience scouting. They wanted to do something to give back, stay connected and ensure the troop goes on. Our young men are more busy now than in any other generation before trying to have it all and be all they can be. Our troop wants to get the message out that scouting isn’t just a thing… but more, who you become. We never want a young man to choose one passion over another and we are willing accept them 50% of the time rather than never.

While out in the neighborhood one of the Eagles approached a young man and his sister waiting in their driveway for their father. The Eagle handed the flyer to the young man and started chatting with him about what a troop does and the things a scout can learn. When the father came out, the young man exclaimed his excitement about the possibility of joining the troop. The Eagle conversed with Dad and passionately relived his younger days as a scout. The dad seemed interested and surprised at what he was hearing a troop was as opposed to what he thought a troop was. They promised to discuss joining later that day. Even if that young man doesn’t join our troop we hope he joins some troop. If he doesn’t join scouting we hope that either he or his father shares the story with people they know. Scouting isn’t for everyone, but you won’t know until you give it a chance. When the words are coming from someone who truly deep down in heart and soul tells you a story you know its true and even if it’s not the thing for you, you would hope that everyone sees Scouting is an amazing opportunity for any young man. There is so much to be gained for education, personal growth, and even in how you deal with friends and family.

Thank you to the Eagle’s who came out to handle this task. Keeping coming back, because once you’re a 334 scout your always a 334 scout!

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Cub Scout Pack 334 and Scouts BSA Troop 334


Cub Scouts meet every Friday at 7:00pm and Scouts BSA meet every Monday at 7:30pm
Leverington Presbyterian Church
6301 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19128
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