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Farthest North Girl Scout Council History The Farthest North Girl Scout Council, formerly called the Fairbanks Girl Scout Council was started in 1925 by a handful of girls in Fairbanks headed by Jessie Bloom. Girl Scouting expanded to rural Alaska in 1945 with the establishment of the first troop in Nome. Because many of the girls did not speak English, they learned the Girl Scout Promise in Eskimo and English. By 1947 the Fairbanks Girl Scout Council became a member of the National Council of Girl Scouts. Camp Clegg was acquired in 1949 and became the Council’s summer camp; and a troop was organized in Fort Yukon in 1949 and in Point Barrow in 1950. In 1952, the Farthest North Girl Scout Council was formed and incorporated with 400 girls and 90 adults. The following year the first full-time executive director was hired. By 1957 there were 100 troops with more than 1,000 girls in the Farthest North Girl Scout Council, which is approximately the size we are today.
The Girl Scout Mission |
![]() Jessie Bloom, founder of the Fairbanks Girl Scout Council, now known as the Farthest North Girl Scout Council. |
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