McKenzie sat on the executive board of the Boy Scouts organization in Philadelphia for more than 20 years. Asked to produce a figure of "an ideal scout," the sculptor chose several young scouts to model in uniform. In 1915, he gave the executive board an 18-inch bronze figure, together with rights to the royalties resulting from sales of copies. He said that the boy's uncovered head denoted reverence, obedience to authority, and discipline. The hatchet held by the scout is a symbol of truthfulness and the hope it would never be unsheathed for wanton destruction, but "applied unceasingly to the neck of treachery, treason, cowardice, discourtesy, dishonesty, and dirt."[4]
McKenzie's life-sized version of the work was unveiled at Philadelphia's Cradle of Liberty Council on June 12, 1937.
The Philadelphia headquarters was built by the Boy Scouts of America on city-owned land in 1929, with the council paying a nominal $1-per-year rent. In 2008, the City of Philadelphia filed an anti-discrimination lawsuit in response to the BSA's national policy of excluding openly gay scout leaders, demanding that the Cradle of Liberty Council defy the BSA policy, pay a market-rate rent on the building, or vacate it. The council won the lawsuit in Federal court, and the judge ordered the city to pay its $877,000 in legal fees. Instead, the city settled with the council, paying the bulk of its legal fees but requiring it to vacate the building. The Ideal Scout was removed in 2013.
^Ray, Harold L. (1993). "Book Reviews ("The Sport Sculpture of R. Tait McKenzie")" (PDF). Canadian Journal of History of Sport. 24–25: 84. doi:10.1123/cjhs.24.1.84.
^"Boy Scout, (sculpture)". Save Outdoor Sculpture, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia survey. 1993. Retrieved February 7, 2012.
^"Ideal Boy Scout". SIRIS. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
^Buck, Diane M. and Virginia A. Palmer (1995). Outdoor Sculpture in Milwaukee: A Cultural and Historical Guidebook, p. 49. The State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison
^"The Brookings register. [volume] (Brookings, Brookings County, S.D.) 1903-1971, February 27, 1919, Image 1".
^"The Ideal Scout". waymarking.com. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
^"The Boy Scout (No Longer Here) - Naperville, Illinois - Scouts Monuments and Memorials on Waymarking.com". waymarking.com. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
^"The Boy Scout - South Ogden, Utah - Scouts Monuments and Memorials on Waymarking.com". waymarking.com. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
^"William D. Boyce Memorial - Ottawa, IL - Scouts Monuments and Memorials on Waymarking.com". waymarking.com. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
^"The Scout". Flickr. 2 December 2008. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
^"cyclotram: The Ideal Scout". cyclotram.blogspot.com. 22 September 2009. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
^""The Ideal Scout" Statue – Sioux Falls, South Dakota - Scouts Monuments and Memorials on Waymarking.com". waymarking.com. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
External linksedit
Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Ideal Scout.
The Ideal Scout
"The Boy Scout, Two Statues by McKenzie". scouters.us. Retrieved September 7, 2017.