Hello Muddah, hello Faddah, here I am at Camp Lenape

With apologies to Allan Sherman’s 1963 parody that complains about the terrible conditions at a fictional Camp Grenada, the following upbeat letters sent home by our contributor’s younger self recall his joyful stay at Camp Lenape, a Boy Scout camp.

1951 Esso NJ Roadmap detail

Mosquitoes, merit badges, a menu of bug juice and burgers, plus a canoe trip along the Wading River from Chatsworth to Chip’s Folly had the makings of an unforgettable week-long wilderness adventure in 1956 at the camp once in the Pinelands of Medford Township, Burlington County, New Jersey.

What may sound like indentured servitude to us today was one 13-year-old boy’s relentless pursuit of merit badges to advance rank in scouting.  

Some excerpts, as written:

July 29, 1956

Dear Mom, Dad, and John

We came back from the Wading River canoe trip at 3:45… there were three to a canoe and three canoes… We paddled on until about 6:30 pm and just as we got out of the canoe it began to rain like all heck, with lightning and thunder…

…finally we succeeded in getting the tent up… we were soaked to the skin.

At this point it was pitch dark and the rain ceased. The we ate supper, hamburgers, salad, bug juice, and oranges.

We hardly slept a wink because of the singing of the mosquitos.

…today we packed all our duffle, ate breakfast, and had a small morning worship service… breakfast was Rice Krispies, orange juice, bacon, coco and scrambled eggs.

We paddled on until 11:30 am and stopped for a small swim and at lunch… For lunch we had jelly sandwiches, bug juice, cookies and watermelon…

…we made it. We had canoed for close to 9-1/2 hours.

…Only about 40 boys in camp this week… Richard and me are going to try and get as many merit badges as possible.

July 31, 1956

Just got back from washing dishes for cooking merit badge… For our supper tonight we had chocolate pudding, coco, veal cutlet, diced carrots, homemade bread, and broth… For Cooking merit badge I have already made a fireplace and cook meals and build fire.

For Pioneering merit badge I have been working on [a] 100 foot bridge across Great Earth Dam… learn how to splice, lash, etc.

For Wildlife management merit badge we have to fill one side of the dams at the waterfront with fertilizer so… roots will take hold… and prevent erosion. Also we have to answer a couple of questions, write a report… not[e} ten animals we have seen…

…for First Aid we have to know some questions and demonstrate… Well, see you Saturday and I sure hope I’m Star…

Love, Harlan

Such was a scout’s summer adventure before housing development in the late 1980s swallowed up Medford’s 419-acre Camp Lenape, which once served thousands of Burlington County Boy Scouts.

 

Published by

John McCormick

Teacher at Riverton School 1974-2019, author, amateur historian, Historical Society of Riverton Board Member 2007-2023, newsletter editor 2007-2023, website editor 2011-2023

3 thoughts on “Hello Muddah, hello Faddah, here I am at Camp Lenape”

  1. Love how the experience involved mosquitoes, getting soaked, and hard work. Meanwhile, the envelope is addressed to the family, who are hardly roughing it … staying in OCEAN CITY!

  2. Dear John,
    I enjoyed reading your rendition of 1956 Boy Scout summer camp! Both my younger brothers were scouts also & had attended summer camps in New York state from whence we’d all hailed.
    Where are your home stomping grounds? Did you grow up in the Medford, NJ, area? Your 1951 Esso map was cool, showing several small towns with which I’m familiar. From 1976 to 1979 I had dated a guy from Medford who graduated from Leni Lenape High School in 1978.
    I’m originally from Westchester County, NY, along the east bank of the Hudson River. From 1963 to 1983 our family had vacationed in Ocean City, NJ. Our aunt had lived in Corbin City till 1973 & then moved to Lindenwold. So we had visited her once or twice a year in either place.
    Thanks for keeping in touch. I’ve been living in Iowa for 36 years, but my heart is still drawn to NY & NJ!
    I have the album, “My Son the Nut,” which includes ‘Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah’ by Allan
    Sherman.

    Carolyn

    1. In his youth Harlan Radford, the author, lived in Collingswood and Moorestown, among other places. Now across the miles in Ohio, he too, has affection for this area. The HSR is grateful for his contribution of hundreds of scans from his postcard, photo, and ephemera collection which comprise a large part of the images seen on this website.

Leave a Reply