The Scoutmaster by Norman Rockwell:
In 1956 Saturday Evening Post painter and Boys Life contributor Norman Rockwell completed one of the most iconic images of the Boy Scout movement known as “The Scoutmaster”. The painting depicts four boys sleeping in their tents on a warm summer night under the stars with their Scoutmaster tending to the campfire.
The painting though was actually staged some three years earlier at the 1953 National Scout Jamboree in Irvine, California near Santa Ana. Over 45,000 Scouts participated in the week-long event including a contingent of 10 troops from the Oakland Area Council which included at least two members of Lake District’s Troop 95, 13 year old Howard Lincoln and 24 year old assistant scoutmaster, Machek N’Gult Brotherhood member and Eagle Scout Edmund Crinnion.
During the Jamboree, Oakland Scoutmaster Del Anderson (who passed away in August 2008 at 103 years of age) was asked to get four boys for a picture that Rockwell was creating for the annual Boys Life calendar. The four scouts including young Howard Lincoln were asked to setup the canvass tents, build a fire in the blazing summer heat of Southern California and then lay down in the tents with their heads on the pillows as if they were sleeping. Howard Lincoln can be seen as the boy directly to the right of the Scoutmaster. Howard indicated that he faced forward because he knew that his mother would not be happy unless his face could be seen.
The Scoutmaster on the other hand was not a real Scout but actually an actor/model who came nicely groomed for the photo shoot except that he had the wrong type of shoes. Edmund Crinnion, one of the Assistant Scoutmasters from Oakland’s Troop 95 who was helping his scouts during the day long event was able to correct this mistake by loaning the actor his own boots which can be seen in Rockwell’s painting. Edmund passed away in 1991, but interesting enough, Edmund’s boots were saved and are still in the possession of the Crinnion family.
Rockwell then took hundreds of pictures in this all day photo event which lasted about eight hours. Once Rockwell returned to his studio he worked on creating the painting from the multiple photographs and turned the daytime image into a star filled night time painting.
About a year after the Jamboree and the Rockwell photo shoot, Lincoln received a letter and either $10 or $20 dollars from Rockwell asking him to sign a release for his work. Howard Lincoln would later earn his Eagle award in 1955, become President and CEO of the Seattle Mariners baseball team as well as being honored with the Distinguished Eagle Scout Award.
As former members of the Oakland Area Council both Howard Lincoln and Edmund Crinnion will be forever associated with Norman Rockwell’s painting of The Scoutmaster.