Great Leaders of
Yesterday
Hi Girl Scouts!
I mentioned that there were many little groups of Girl Scouts started in local areas but eventually, most of them joined Juliette Low's Girl Scouts soon after they began in 1912. The reason for this is that Juliette Low thought BIG! Nationally! That's why she asked Edith Johnston, our National Secretary at the time, to leave Savannah, Georgia and move the Girl Scout headquarters to Washington, DC...and then on to New York. She meant to recruit girls and volunteers nationally and the best place to start was in our nation's capitol.
Most of us think of Juliette Low
as a great organizer but do you know what I think her greatest talent was? It
was recruiting great volunteers. Juliette Low was the very best at this... She
was able to recruit and inspire women who thought about how to empower girls
and committed themselves to making it happen.
Though all the women Juliette Low
recruited at first said they were way too busy. In truth, they were all in
great demand by many charitable organizations but Juliette Low had a way of not taking 'No' for
an answer. Soon, the women she recruited were not just helping with Girl
Scouts...they became Girl Scouts themselves!
With respect to great volunteers,
some things never change! The organization continues to muster the best
volunteers and our volunteers bring out the best in Girl Scouting to this day. Even better, we encourage our girls to grow up into leaders and volunteers themselves!
Some of Juliette Low's most
important recruits included:
Edith Johnston, our first Executive Secretary who helped
supervised our Girl Scout headquarters' move to Washington, DC, where it was
able to grow into a nationally minded organization.
Helen Storrow, our first trainer and the benefactor of Our
Chalet.
Jane Deeter Rippen, one of our first National Directors and
great philanthropist.
Ann Hyde Choate, second National President and who, with
Jane Deeter Rippen and Lou Hoover oversaw the transition of Juliette Low's Girl
Scouts into the modern national organization we are today.
Lou Henry Hoover, a First Lady (wife of President Herbert Hoover) and a very active National President of the
Girl Scouts who promoted volunteerism in a weekly radio broadcast.
Lou Hoover, First Lady
and Girl Scout
Together, these volunteers gave
Girl Scouts the firm foundation and philosophy that has sustained our Movement through the first hundred years.
Among us are the volunteers and girls who will keep Girl Scouts relevant for
the next hundred years.
Ann Hyde Choate
Did you know? When Juliette Low stepped down as the
Founding President, the team of Jane Deeter Rippen and Ann Hyde Choate led the
second generation of Girl Scouts. They shaped our Girl Scouts into the forward
thinking organization it is today while uniting all the small groups of Girl
Scouts that started in 1910 into a single national Movement. They built a
strong bond with the British and European Guides and Scouts, taking an active
role in forming of World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts.
Our great leaders of today AND tomorrow...
YGGGS!
Dr D-
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