Welcome to Troop 79's official web site. This site was developed to help parents, new
to Scouting and/or Troop 79, become familiar with the Scouting program and the
operation of our troop. Your son's
success in Scouting will be greatly enhanced by your understanding and
involvement in the program.
We welcome
you and your son to the program!
What
we do?
The mission of the Boy Scouts of America and Troop 79 is
to prepare young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes
by instilling in them the values of the Scout Oath and Law.
Our history.
Troop 79 was chartered with Southern Hills Christian Church in January 1967. In 40 years of service to the community of Edmond,
there have been 12 Scoutmasters and almost 100 Eagle Scouts. The total roster
of Troop 79 contains hundreds of youth and adults who enjoy the out-outdoors
and the opportunity for fellowship and leadership that is found in the Scouting
Program.
To get a better understanding of what the youth of Troop 79 have accomplished,
visit a troop meeting and check the ribbons on the Troop Flag. The
participation in District and Council functions shows that the Troop is always
on the go. Because the Chartering Organization is strongly behind the Troop
Committee and Troop 79, our status as a Quality Unit will continue for years to
come.
About our staff.
Troop 79 is guided by a representative of our Charter Organization, the
Southern Hills Christian Church, along a Troop Committee comprised of
registered adult members of the troop, along with a Scoutmaster, several
Scoutmaster Assistants and a large number of other registered adult volunteers.
The model for troop organization, promoted by the national office of the BSA,
is that troops are to be run by boys. This philosophy implies that the boys
will plan and carry out the program of the troop, assisted only as needed by
adults. Thus, in Troop 79, the boys plan the annual calendar as well as the
program for each meeting and camp out. Furthermore, they are responsible for
executing the plan once it is made. Adults in the troop refrain from helping
any more than necessary. Occasionally a program will fail, and programs are
sometimes chaotic. These consequences are to be expected. It is our belief that
the Scouts learn from their mistakes much more than any teaching the adults
could provide. In the process of planning and executing the program, the Scouts
are actively achieving the Aims of Scouting. Troop 79 prides itself in being a
boy-run troop!