Arthur R. Eldred, for whom the Theodore Roosevelt Council’s National Eagle
Scout Association Chapter is named, holds the distinction of being the first
Eagle Scout in the Boy Scouts of America. Arthur Eldred was born in Brooklyn,
New York, August 16, 1895. His father died when he was a young boy, and he was
raised by his mother on a small farm on Long Island. He became a member of Troop
1, Rockville Centre, Long Island in November 1910, just eight months after the
incorporation of the Boy Scouts of America.
Arthur Eldred advanced rapidly through the ranks, becoming a First Class
Scout by March 1911 and by April 1912, he had completed the last
of 21 merit
badges required for Eagle. To make sure that Arthur Eldred was worthy of the Boy
Scouts of America’s first Eagle Badge, he was reviewed not only by his own
troop’s board of review, but by a special board composed of the three major
founders of Scouting - Chief Scout Executive James E. West, Chief Scout Ernest
Thompson Seton, and National Scout Commissioner Dan Beard. In a letter dated
August 21, 1912, West formally notified Eldred that he was the first Eagle, and
it is this date that is inscribed on a memorial plaque on his grave. Because the
die had not yet been cut for the Eagle badge, Arthur Eldred had to wait until
Labor Day to get his emblem of honor.
When Eldred earned his Eagle, the fledgling Scout organization had about
300,000 members. A measure of his achievement was that by April 1912 only 141
merit badges had been earned by about 50 Scouts in the whole country. Eldred's
honors in Scouting did not end with the Eagle. Within weeks, he saved a
15-year-old Scout from drowning while camping with his troop at Orange Lake, New
York. For this he received the Honor Medal for Life Saving from Chief Scout
Seton.
Eldred studied agriculture at Cornell University, graduating in 1916. He was
on the track and cross-country teams and was president of the University’s
agricultural association. During World War I, he served as an enlisted man
aboard a U.S. Navy submarine chaser based at Corfu, Greece.
Throughout his adult life, Arthur Eldred continued his interest in Scouting.
He served as a board of review examiner, committee chairman of Troop 77 in
Clementon, New Jersey, and as a member of the Camden County Council. In civic
affairs, his interest remained with youth. He served on the Clementon Board of
Education. At the time of his death in 1951, he was president of the Overbrook
Regional School Board.
"Here was a life that had meaning in service to others," said
Donald H. Moore, President of the Camden County Council. "The Boy Scouts of
America can take pride in its first Eagle."