Northern Lights Council

The Northern Lights Council of the Boy Scouts of America is the local Boy Scout council that serves all of North Dakota, parts of South Dakota, northwestern Minnesota, and northeast Montana. The Northern Lights Council (NLC) formed in 1974 when several councils (Red River Valley Council - Fargo, Lake Agassiz Council - Grand Forks, Missouri Valley Council - Bismarck, and Great Plains Council - Minot) were merged into one. As of 2017, the Northern Lights Council delivers Scouting to more than 10,000 members and 3,000 registered volunteers. The Northern Lights Council is the second largest Council geographically of the more than 260 BSA Councils in the United States. [1]

Northern Lights Council
OwnerBoy Scouts of America
HeadquartersFargo, North Dakota
CountryUnited States
Founded1974
PresidentTim Sayler
Council CommissionerStephen Snowden
Scout ExecutiveRichard McCartney
Website
nlcbsa.org

Organization

The Northern Lights Council is divided into 8 districts:

  • Frontier Trails District
  • Great Plains District
  • Lake Agassiz District
  • Lakes District
  • Northern Sky District
  • Oxcart Trails District
  • Roughrider District
  • Tomahawk District

Camps

Camp Wilderness
OwnerBoy Scouts of America
LocationBad Axe Lake, Minnesota
CountryUnited States
Coordinates47.094°N 94.944°W / 47.094; -94.944 (Camp Wilderness, BSA)
Founded1946
FounderHerman Stern
Website
Camp Wilderness

Northern Lights Council is home to Camp Wilderness a 2,400 acres (9.7 km2) summer camp located along Bad Axe Lake near Emmaville in Hubbard County, Minnesota. The camp was founded by Herman Stern and other businessmen of the region in 1946.

Camp Wilderness is a 2,400 acres (9.7 km2) camp. On August 18, 2006, in commemoration for the camp's 60th anniversary, the council celebrated the dedication of the Butler Wilderness Outpost, a wooden encampment designed for an all-summer Cub Scout camp. The outpost opened for its first summer season in June 2007.

Other Camps

• Heart Butte Scout Reservation, near Lake Tschida in North Dakota

• Big 4 Scout Camp, west of Minot, North Dakota

• Tom Brantner Memorial Camp, near Glyndon, Minnesota

Order of the Arrow

Pa-Hin Lodge #27
OwnerBoy Scouts of America
HeadquartersFargo, ND
CountryUnited States
Founded1977
Website
Pa-Hin Lodge

Pa-Hin Lodge 27 is the local lodge of the Order of the Arrow for the Northern Lights Council. The Pa-Hin Lodge was chartered in 1977 and serves Boy Scouts in the states of North Dakota, Minnesota, Montana, and South Dakota. The Pa-Hin Lodge started on January 1, 1977 through the merger of four lodges.

The four Lodges which merged to form Pa-Hin were:

  • Thunderbird Lodge (371) (last charter expired on December 31, 1976)
  • Chan-O-Wapi Lodge (52) (last charter expired on December 31, 1976)
  • Minniduta Lodge (176) (last charter expired on December 31, 1976)
  • Chatoka Lodge (183) (last charter expired on December 31, 1976)

From 1977 through approximately 1980, the former lodges continued to conduct operations as tribes (example: the Thunderbird Tribe), holding conclaves and OA events along the old lodge lines. Around 1980, the tribes structure was dis-established and operations were organized as Chapters, aligning chapters based on the District structure established by the Northern Lights Council.

The 2014 Roster count was over 600 registered members. Pa-Hin is a Lakota (Sioux) word meaning porcupine. Variations of spelling include pȟahíŋ (Lakota), phahį́ (Dakota), and pahį́ (Assiniboine).

The totem of the Pa-Hin Lodge is the porcupine, but the Lodge's common logo shows a porcupine with a saber tooth.

See also

References

  1. Hook, James; Franck, Dave; Austin, Steve (1982). An Aid to Collecting Selected Council Shoulder Patches with Valuation.
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