History of Venturing
Venturing was officially created by the Boy Scouts of America's executive
board on February 9, 1998. However, if you ask Venturing Associate Director
Bill Evans, who was there that day and helped create Venturing, he would
expand a little.
In 1995, the Outdoor Exploring Committee chaired by Dr. Dick Miller of
Waynesboro, Virginia, met in Long Key, Florida. The primary purpose of the
meeting was to address the issue of how to support and sustain the amazing
growth that outdoor Exploring was enjoying. During a five-year period in
the early 1990s, outdoor Exploring had grown 94 percent to almost 100,000
members. When the committee would come up with an idea, it would sound
familiar. Then they would refer to a 1950 edition of the Exploring
Handbook and find their idea had already been applied years ago. So, if
you are a history buff and have an early edition of the Exploring
Handbook, you can see the many similarities between the early days of
Exploring and today's Venturing.
If you really want to trace the roots of Venturing, you have to go way
back. The need for a senior Boy Scout program probably surfaced the second
day after Scouting started in the United States in 1910. Actually, in the
very first National Executive Board meeting report, there is a discussion
about losing older boys. It was no surprise to our founders that older boys
needed an age-specific program with challenges appropriate for them. Older
boy programs cropped up across the country during those early years, causing
the need for national action. In 1935, the BSA created Senior Scouting,
publishing the Guide to Senior Scouting. There were several options,
including Explorers, Sea Scouts, and Air Scouts. In 1949, the BSA
consolidated the senior programs, with the exception of Sea Scouts, into
Explorer Scouts. At that time, a boy could be an Explorer in the troop or in a
stand-alone unit called the Explorer post. The Explorer advancement program
included the Bronze Award, the Gold Award, and the Silver Award. Sound
familiar? The last Silver Awards were earned in 1966 as Exploring began to
turn more toward career emphasis. That is until the new Venturing Silver
Award was reintroduced in August 1998. The new Venturing advancement award
medals are very similar in design to their predecessors of the 1940s and
1950s.
What was true in 1920 is true today: Older teens need a program specific
to their needs and abilities. How old are our Venturers, anyway? Our age
chart is almost a perfect bell curve with 17 being the highest point.
Eighteen is next, followed by 16. There are actually more 19-year-olds
than 14-year-olds. Because Venturing is very challenging and usually
involves ambitious travel, it lends itself more to older teens.
When Associate Director Evans looks back over Venturing's last seven
years, he points out that the most enjoyable moments of the development
are not related to the phenomenal growth. They are moments when he heard
Eagle Scouts stand before a group and talk about how Venturing has allowed
them a place to be an Eagle Scout and to continue to learn and grow. Moments
when a young lady stands before a group to tell how she finally had a place
to be a Scout along with her mom, dad, and brothers. Venturing does change
lives.