In this illuminating look at gender and Scouting in the United
States, Benjamin Rene Jordan examines how in its founding and early
rise, the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) integrated traditional
Victorian manhood with modern, corporate-industrial values and
skills. While showing how the BSA Americanized the original British
Scouting program, Jordan finds that the organization's
community-based activities signaled a shift in men's social norms,
away from rugged agricultural individualism or martial primitivism
and toward productive employment in offices and factories,
stressing scientific cooperation and a pragmatic approach to the
responsibilities of citizenship.
By examining the BSA's national reach and influence, Jordan
demonstrates surprising ethnic diversity and religious
inclusiveness in the organization's founding decades. For example,
Scouting officials' preferred urban Catholic and Jewish
working-class immigrants and "modernizable" African Americans and
Native Americans over rural whites and other traditional farmers,
who were seen as too "backward" to lead an increasingly
urban-industrial society. In looking at the revered organization's
past, Jordan finds that Scouting helped to broaden mainstream
American manhood by modernizing traditional Victorian values to
better suit a changing nation.