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Scouting in Georgia has a long history, from the 1910s to the present day, serving thousands of youth in programs that suit the environment in which they live. The state is home to many milestones for the Scouting movement. The Girl Scout birthplace is located in Savannah, and President Jimmy Carter served as a Scoutmaster in Plains, Georgia.
Dating back to 1920, Boy Scouts of America (BSA) was prominent in Georgia. Until 1974, some southern councils were racially segregated. (The Old Hickory council did not integrate until 1974.) Colored Troops, as they were officially known, were given little support from Districts and Councils. Some Scouting executives and leaders believed that Colored Scouts and Leaders would be less able to live up to the ideals of Scouting.[citation needed]
Council Name[1] | Active dates | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
Start | End | ||
Augusta Council | 1920 | 1925 | Changed name to Richmond County Council #93 |
Augusta Area Council | 1929 | 1941 | Changed name to Georgia-Carolina #93 |
Aumuckalie Council | 1921 | 1922 | Disbanded 1922. Believed based in Americus, Georgia and absorbed by Nochaway #100 (later Chehaw in 1922). |
Chatham County Council | 1923 | 1942 | Changed name to Coastal Empire #99 in 1942. |
Chattahoochee Council | 1923 | 1950 | West Point, Ga. Changed name to George H. Lanier #94 in 1950. Merged in 1989 with Chattahoochee Council in Columbus, Ga |
Cherokee Council | 1923 | 1923 | Changed name to Floyd County #95 in 1923. |
Columbus Georgia Council | 1919 | 1928 | |
Columbus Area Council | 1929 | 1929 | Function merged into Direct Service 1930. |
Coastal Empire Council | 1921 | 1922 | Merged with Okefenokee Area Council to become the Coastal Georgia Council in 2014[2] |
Floyd County Council | 1919 | 1923 | Changed name to Cherokee #95 in 1923. |
Floyd County Council | 1923 | 1925 | Disbanded in 1925. Absorbed into Atlanta 92 in 1929. |
Gainesville Area Council | 1928 | 1932 | Function merged into Direct Service July 1933. |
George H. Lanier Council | 1950 | 1989 | Merged into Chattahoochee #91 in 1989. |
Georgia-Alabama Council | 1934 | 1964 | Merged into Chattahoochee #91 in 1964. |
Griffin Area Council | 1927 | 1930 | Changed name to Flint River #95 in 1930. |
Macon Council | 1919 | 1923 | Changed name to Central Georgia #96 in 1923. |
Mcintosh County Council | 1922 | 1923 | Disbanded in 1923. Merged into Chattahoochee Council in 1923. |
Muscogee County Council | 1923 | 1925 | Changed name to Columbus Area #98 in 1925. |
Nochaway Council | 1921 | 1929 | Disbanded in 1929 & the counties were run from the national office then in New York City. Rechartered as Chehaw #97 in 1939. Spelled Notchoway in some BSA records and Notchaway in some other places but Nochaway in actual records of the council. |
Northeast Georgia Council | 1922 | 1931 | Changed name to Gainesville Area #428 in 1931. |
Ococah Council | 1922 | 1924 | Changed name to Northeast Georgia #101 in 1924. |
Okefenokee Council | 1921 | 1922 | Disbanded 1922. |
Okefenokee Area Council | 1921 | 1922 | Merged with Coastal Empire Council to become Coastal Georgia Council in 2014[2] |
Richmond County Council | 1925 | 1929 | Changed name to Augusta Area #93 in 1929. |
Savannah Council | 1920 | 1923 | Merged into Chatham County #99 in 1923. |
West Georgia Council | 1946 | 1964 | Merged into Chattahoochee #91 in 1964. |
Withlacocchee Council | 1926 | 1930 | Changed name to Okefenokee Area #758 in 1930. |
There are eleven active local BSA councils that serve Scouts in Georgia. Active councils, districts, and lodges are shown in green.
The Atlanta Area Council encompasses 13 counties in northern Georgia. The council office is currently located in Atlanta, Georgia.
The Central Georgia Council serves 24 counties in central Georgia.[3]
The Chattahoochee Council serves Scouts in Georgia and Alabama, with the Council office located in Columbus, Georgia. Active from 1964 to present, the council's name refers to the Chattahoochee River, which flows through Georgia, Alabama, and Florida.
OA lodge: Chattahoochee Lodge #204 chartered 1941 and still active. Absorbed Hiawassee Lodge #333 (West Georgia Council) in 1963. Absorbed Wehadkee Lodge #273 (George H. Lanier Council, West Point) in both 1964 and 1990.
Cherokee Area Council serves Scouts in Tennessee and Georgia, with the council office located in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The John Ross District serves Northwest Georgia Walker, Catoosa and Dade Counties. Website: www.CherokeeAreaBSA.com. Skymont Scout Reservation offers year-round and summer camping opportunities, www.Skymont.org.
The Council office of the Coastal Georgia Council is located in Savannah, Georgia. It was formed on March 1, 2014 when the Coastal Empire Council and the Okefenokee Area Council merged. [4]
Tomo-Chi-Chi Lodge #119 chartered 1938 and merged with Pithlako Lodge with the 2014 merger into I-Tsu-La Lodge.[5]
Flint River Council is headquartered in Griffin, Georgia.
Name active from 1941 to currently active. Council office located in Augusta, Georgia, includes districts in South Carolina and Georgia. Website:
OA lodge: Bob White Lodge #87 chartered 1936 and still active.
Name active from 1935 to currently active. Council office located in Pendergrass, Georgia.
Districts:
OA lodge: Mowogo Lodge #243 chartered in 1943 and still active.
Camps:
Northwest Georgia Council serves Scouts in northwest Georgia.
The Suwannee River Area Council, active from 1924 to present, encompasses 13 counties in north Florida and south Georgia. The Council Service Center and central headquarters are in Tallahassee, Florida.
The Girl Scout Birthplace is located in Savannah, Georgia, which was the Gordon family home that now provides tours to thousands of Scouts every year. Upon Juliette Gordon Low's death in 1927, she willed her carriage house, eventually named The Girl Scout First Headquarters, to the local Savannah Girl Scouts for continued use.[6]
In 2008 the eight Girl Scout Councils in Georgia merged to form two councils. In addition Girl Scouts of Moccasin Bend headquartered in Tennessee covers Catoosa, Chattooga, Dade and Walker Counties in northwestern Georgia.[7]
Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia was formed on May 1, 2008 by the merger of eight previous councils: Girl Scouts, Central Savannah River Council; Girl Scouts of Concharty Council; Girl Scouts of Middle Georgia; Girl Scouts of Northeast Georgia; Girl Scouts of Southwest Georgia; and The Girl Scout Council of Savannah, Georgia. Though some counties in these old councils were moved to Girl Scouts of Greater Atlanta. This council also covers part of South Carolina and Russell County in Alabama.
Headquarters: Lizella, Georgia
Website: http://www.gshg.org/
Camps:
The following camps were closed in 2016 and either sold or their lease ended[8]
Girl Scouts of Greater Atlanta serves about 42,000 girls and 17,000 adult volunteers in 34 counties of Greater Atlanta and a portion of Polk County Tennessee. It was formed in 2008 by the merger of Girl Scout Council of Northwest Georgia and Girl Scouts of Pine Valley Council.
Headquarters: Atlanta, Georgia
Website: http://www.girlscoutsatl.org/
Camps:
Former Camps:
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