The Presidents of the United States and the Boy Scouts of America
One of the causes contributing to the success of the Boy Scouts of America 
has been the thoughtful, wholehearted way in which each President of the United 
States since William Howard Taft in 1910 has taken an active part in the work 
of the movement.  Each served as Honorary President during his term in 
office.
George W. Bush
 
President Bush, a former Cub Scout, praised Scouting and its enduring values 
when he appeared by video to the 40,000 Scouts, volunteers, and leaders at the 
15th National Scout Jamboree at Fort A.P. Hill, Va., in July 2001.
"Times and challenges change, yet the values of Scouting will never 
change. Scouts of any era would recognize every word that you live by today, 
because those words have always defined Scouting. The goodness of a person and 
of the society he or she lives in often comes down to very simple things, and 
the words found in the Scout Law. Every society depends on trust and loyalty, 
on courtesy and kindness, on bravery and reverence. These are the values of 
Scouting, and these are the values of America."
Bill Clinton
 
President Clinton greeted 30,000 Scouts and leaders and 6,000 staff at the 
1997 National Scout Jamboree at Fort A.P. Hill, Va. He challenged Scouts and 
Scouters to spread the word of the importance of service to other Scouts and 
Scouters back home.
"For almost a century, the Boy Scouts of America have helped to 
make volunteer service an American ideal. With every act of kindness, you've 
strengthened our nation's commitment to community and promoted a sense of 
civic responsibility."
George H. Bush 
 
President Bush voiced strong support for Scouting and lauded the BSA for 
its fight against drug abuse. He appeared at the 12th National Jamboree at 
Fort A.P. Hill, Va., on August 7, 1989.
"The Boy Scouts of America has assumed a leadership role in 
confronting this problem [drug abuse]. You are teaching self-protection 
strategies against drugs and other dangers. You have circulated these 
strategies in direct language in a very successful pamphlet called Drugs: 
A Deadly Game. And you have done something elseyou are leading the youth 
of America by example."
Ronald Reagan
 
President Reagan became involved in Scouting with the Golden Empire Council 
in Sacramento, Calif., while serving as governor of the state. During his 8 
years in office, he chaired Project SOAR (Save Our American Resources), served 
as membership roundup chairman, participated in annual Report to the Governor 
ceremonies, and served on the council's advisory board. For his service to 
youth, he was awarded the Silver Beaver Award. As a member of the Los Angeles 
Area Council, he served as Scoutorama chairman, as a speaker for the council
 recognition dinner, and as a sustaining member.
"I applaud your many efforts and programs encouraging character 
development and leadership among American youth. By sponsoring many useful 
physical, mental, and social activities designed to promote self-responsibility, 
the Scouts strengthen the cornerstone of individual freedom in our nation. 
These programs develop the youngster's confidence in his ability to deal with 
nature, society, and a challenging world."
Jimmy Carter
 
President Carter was involved in Scouting as a troop committee chairman and 
Scoutmaster. In support of the President's appeal for an energy conservation 
program, the Boy Scouts of America held a Scouting Environment Day, April 23, 
1977, with other programs planned to make a major contribution toward achieving 
national energy conservation goals.
"As a former volunteer Scout leader ... I am greatly impressed by 
the role of your fine program in our national life. It is a constructive initiative 
on the part of young Americans to explore career interests and to become better 
prepared for a more satisfying and rewarding future."
Gerald R. Ford
 
Gerald Ford was the first Eagle Scout to become Vice President and later 
President. He began his Scouting career on December 17, 1924, when he became a 
member of Troop 15, sponsored by the Trinity M.E. Church in Grand Rapids, Mich. 
He was recognized with the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award "for his service to 
the Nation and community," by the Grand Valley Council at Grand Rapids, Mich., 
in May 1970. He received the Scouter of the Year Award on December 2, 1974, from 
the National Capitol Area Council, Washington, D.C.
"One of the proudest moments of my life came in the Court of Honor 
when I was awarded the Eagle Scout badge. I still have that badge. It is a 
treasured possession. I am the first Eagle Scout Vice President. The three great 
principles which Scouting providesself-discipline, teamwork, and moral 
and patriotic valuesare the basic building blocks of leadership. I applaud 
the Scouting program for continuing to emphasize them. I am confident that your 
ability to bring ideals, values, and leadership training to millions of our young 
people will help to bring about a new eraa time in which not only our 
Republic will progress in peace and freedom, but a time in which the entire world 
shall be secure, and all its people free."
Richard M. Nixon
 
President Nixon hosted the First National Explorer Presidents' Congress in 1971 
on the White House lawn. As Vice President he visited and spoke at the national 
jamborees held at Irvine Ranch, Calif., in 1953, and at Valley Forge State Park, 
Pa., in 1957.
"I welcome your determination to seek out new members in our great 
and growing cities, as well as throughout rural America. For through Scouting many 
of these young citizens can more fully develop their potential for public service 
and become effective leaders in their communities and in our nation.
"I strongly believe that Scouting offers an exceptional opportunity 
to learn about good citizenship by being a good citizen, and I am glad to hear 
that we can count on you to carry on the very important work ... in encouraging 
America's boys to make themselves into the men our country needs."
Lyndon B. Johnson
 
President Johnson was an active Scout leader with the Capitol Area Council at 
Austin, Texas, serving on its Exploring committee. He was a member of the National 
Capitol Area Council from 1959 through 1963. In 1963 he helped to organize Post 
1200 in Washington, D.C., which was chartered to the House of Representatives for 
page boys working in the U.S. Congress.
"I welcome this opportunity to express my pride and deep sense of 
gratitude for the outstanding example and enviable reputation for human understanding 
and fair play which have throughout the productive life of your organization been 
hallmarks of Scouting everywhere. Your conduct, both individually and in your group
activities, has been worthy of admiration by all the young citizens of our land. 
Today, as we face the challenges of an increasingly complex and frequently disturbing 
world, America needs an alert, responsible, and energetic youth to provide her with 
a vital resource in a hopefully happier and fuller future for all. As I applaud your 
past, I also urge you to rededicate yourselves to the ideals of the Scout Oath, and 
to reaffirm your obligations to your God and to your country. In so doing, you will 
contribute to the strengthening of America's heritage and thereby to the realization 
of our common goals in the Great Society."
John F. Kennedy
 
The first Scout to become President was John F. Kennedy, who was a member of Troop 
2, Bronxville, N.Y., from 1929 to 1931 and a leader of the Boston Council.
"For more than 50 years Scouting has played an important part in the 
lives of the Boy Scouts of this nation. It has helped to mold character, to form 
friendships, to provide a worthwhile outlet for the natural energies of growing boys, 
and to train these boys to become good citizens of the future.
"In a very real sense, the principles learned and practiced as Boy Scouts 
add to the strength of America and her ideals."
Dwight D. Eisenhower
 
President Eisenhower became a member of the national Executive Board of the Boy Scouts 
of America in 1948. He had been a staunch supporter of Scouting ever since his son was a 
Scout.
"The Boy Scout movement merits the unstinted support of every American who 
wants to make his country and his world a better place in which to live. Its emphasis on 
community service and tolerance and world friendship promotes a speedier attainment of 
the enduring peace among men for which we all strive. By developing among its members 
both a spirit of sturdiness, self-reliance, and a realization of the need for cooperative 
effort in every major enterprise, the movement is a prime force in preparing tomorrow's 
men for their duty to themselves, their country, and their world. Here in the United 
States the Boy Scouts of America have accomplished much in its years of service. But 
today, more than ever before, we need expansion of its membership and influence."
Harry S. Truman
 
President Truman gave strong support to the Boy Scouts of America at every opportunity. 
He traveled to Valley Forge, Pa., in June 1950 to open personally the Second National 
Jamboree.
"The Boy Scouts of America, since it was founded in 1910, has contributed 
greatly to the character training of our youth. What a greater nation this would be if 
the principles of Scouting could be woven more closely into our daily lives. If we can 
impress upon our youth principles of friendliness and mutual respect, we shall go a long 
way toward establishing a better understanding among the nations of the world. The Boy 
Scouts of America is making a vital contribution to the character building of our boys 
and young men. Let us work together to make the program of the Boy Scouts available to 
every American boy."
Franklin D. Roosevelt
 
President Roosevelt was the first to enter the White House with a record as an active 
Scout leader. He was president of the Greater New York Councils of the Boy Scouts of 
America. In 1934 hundreds of thousands of Scouts assembled to hear President Roosevelt's 
broadcast appealing for help for the needy. In response, Scouts contributed by collecting 
nearly 2 million articles of clothing, household furnishings, and other articles for needy 
families. When FDR died in 1945, he had a record of 24 years' service in Scouting.
"As one who has been interested in Scouting over many years it has been most 
heartening to have so many evidences of the practical values of Scout training. We must 
remember that next to active military service itself, there is no higher opportunity for 
serving our country than helping youth to carry on in their efforts to make themselves 
physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight, and prepared to help their 
country to the full in time of war, as well as in time of peace. We must make sure that 
those volunteer agencies which are supplementing the church, the home, and the school by 
providing programs that will help equip the present generation to cope with life problems 
in the difficult days ahead are maintained to their maximum capacity and effectiveness."
Herbert C. Hoover
 
President Hoover launched a forward movement and development program for the Boy Scouts 
of America at a dinner commemorating Scouting's 20th anniversary.
"The first test of democracy is that each individual shall have the opportunity 
to take that position of leadership in the community to which his character, his ability, and 
his ambition entitle him; and because the progress of our country is thus directly related to 
the training in leadership we can give the youth of the Nation. In meeting the vital need that
when the oncoming generation takes over our national affairs it shall be a generation 
bulwarked with character, the Boy Scout movement plays a most useful part.
"The Boy Scout movement has opened for him the portals to adventure and 
constructive joy, by reviving the lore of the frontier and the campfire; by establishing 
contacts with the birds and sometimes with the bees; by matching his patience to the 
deliberate character of fish; by efficient operations of the swimming hole; and by peeps 
into the thousand mysteries of the streams, the trees, and the stars."
Calvin Coolidge
 
President Coolidge's two sons were Scouts, and he had many opportunities to see the Scout 
program at work. He participated in the 16th Annual Meeting of the National Council in 
Washington, D.C., in 1926 by presenting the first Silver Buffalo Awards for distinguished 
service to boyhood.
"The more I have studied this movement, its inception, purposes, organization, 
and principles, the more I have been impressed. Not only is it based on the fundamental 
rules of right thinking and acting, but it seems to embrace in its code almost every virtue 
needed in the personal and social life of mankind. It is a wonderful instrument for good. 
If every boy in the United States could be placed under the wholesome influences of the 
Scout program and should live up to the Scout Oath and rules, we would hear fewer pessimistic 
words as to the future of our nation."
Warren G. Harding
 
"Harding Awards" authorized by President Harding went to 5,058 Scout troops 
in 1923 for having increases in membership.
"I am with the Scout movement heart and soul. It is an organization teaching 
the spirit of service and honor which we must always have in our citizenship. It is a school 
of democracy because in it, standing is won only by taking the equal opportunity given all 
individuals to show their own merit, capacity, and worth. I wish every boy in our America 
could have the advantage and the honor of being in the Boy Scout organization."
Woodrow Wilson
 
President Wilson signed a bill on June 15, 1916, which was passed by both Houses of 
Congress by unanimous consent, granting the organization federal incorporation.
"The Boy Scouts have not only demonstrated their worth to the Nation, but 
have also materially contributed to a deeper appreciation by the American people of the 
higher conception of patriotism and good citizenship. Every nation depends for its future 
upon the proper training and development of its youth. The American boy must have the best 
training and discipline our great democracy can provide if America is to maintain her 
ideals, her standards, and her influence in the world. Anything that is done to increase 
the effectiveness of the Boy Scouts of America will be a genuine contribution to the welfare 
of the Nation."
William Howard Taft
 
When President Taft in 1910 agreed to be Honorary President of the Boy Scouts of America, 
he set a precedent accepted by each of his successors. President Taft accepted to "thus 
sustain a similar relation to the movement as does King George V to a similar movement in 
England." The First Annual Meeting of the organization was held in the White House at the 
invitation of President Taft.
"I am very glad to give my sympathy and support to such a movement as this. 
Anything that directs the boy's spirit in the right channel for usefulness and for the 
making of manly men should be encouraged."
Theodore Roosevelt
 
Theodore Roosevelt was no longer President of the United States when the Boy Scouts of 
America was started in 1910. But he was an ardent booster of the organization. He was a 
troop committeeman of Troop 39, Oyster Bay, N.Y., and first council commissioner of Nassau 
County Council. As a former President he was elected an Honorary Vice-President of the Boy 
Scouts of America. He was the first and only man designated as the "Chief Scout Citizen." 
For many years after his death in 1919, several thousand Scouts and leaders in the New York 
area made annual pilgrimages to his grave in Oyster Bay.
"More and more I have grown to believe in the Boy Scout movement. I regard it 
as one of the movements most full of promise for the future here in America. The Boy Scout 
movement is distinctly an asset to our country for the development of efficiency, virility,
and good citizenship. It is essential that its leaders be men of strong, wholesome character; 
of unmistakable devotion to our country, its customs and ideals, as well as in soul and by 
law citizens thereof, whose wholehearted loyalty is given to this nation, and to this nation 
alone."
ARTICLE IVBYLAWS
Honorary Officers
Section 9.
Honorary President and Vice-Presidents
Clause 1. The President of the United States may, during term of office, be elected to be 
the Honorary President of the Boy Scouts of America. In addition, living former Presidents 
of the United States and other citizens who have rendered distinguished service to our 
country through work for young people may be elected to be honorary vice-presidents. Such 
election shall be by the Executive Board upon the recommendation of the Nominating Committee 
for such terms as the Executive Board shall specify.