Thirty-one
years
after
the
Oakland
Area
Council
was
organized,
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
in
Oakland
was
established
on
July
1,
1947.
Because
the
Oakland
Council
did
not
have
a
lodge,
the
first
arrowmen
of
the
new
lodge
were
actually
inducted
in
other
councils
including
Royaneh
lodge,
the
San
Francisco
chapter
of
the
Order
of
the
Arrow.
The
first
five
members
of
the
new
lodge
that
would
be
called
Machek
N’Gult
Lodge
375
were
Ralph
Clement
(adult
leader),
John
Musgrove
(adult
leader-SM),
Paul
Meier
(youth
leader),
Bill
Hopachuk
(youth
leader)
and
Oakland
District Executive Don MacDougal. It is not currently known where these members took their ordeals.
On
Saturday
October
5,
1947
and
under
the
direction
of
Royaneh
Lodge,
twenty-five
Scouts
and
leaders
were
inducted
into
Machek
N’Gult
Lodge
during
ceremonies
held
at
Redwood
Regional
Park
in
the
Oakland
hills.
Afterwards
a
dinner
was
held
in
the
mess
hall
at
Camp
Dimond.
Some
of
the
new
arrowmen
included
BC
Cain,
Dr.
Robert
Adams,
Frank
Zografos
and
Bob
Delaruelle.
At
the
same
event,
Paul
Meirer
was
named chief of the Lodge, Frank Zagrafos was elected secretary and Bill Seaver elected Treasurer.
The
totem
for
the
new
lodge
was
selected
to
be
a
Golden
Bear
as
some
of
the
original
members
of
the
new
lodge
were
students
at
UC
Berkeley.
When
the
initial
bylaws
of
the
new
lodge
were
created
in
October
of
1947
the
original
name
created
was
“N’Gult
Machek”
and
not
“Machek
N’Gult”.
This
difference
in
name
was
due
to
how
its
meaning
was
interpreted,
“N’Gult
Machek”
stood
for
Bear
Golden
whereas
“Machek
N’Gult”
stood
for
Golden
Bear
which
is
what
the
lodge
name
was
meant
to
be.
The
bylaws
were
changed
to
correct
the
name
and
the
first
lodge
charter
issued
by
the
National
Order
of
the
Arrow
Committee
in
January
of
1948
indicated
the
correct
spelling
and
meaning
of
the
lodge.
The
first
official
meeting
of
the
Machek
N’Gult
lodge
took
place
in
January
1948
at
the
Camp
Dimond
mess
hall
when
Paul
Meier
was
elected
Chief
of
the
new
lodge.
Machek
N’Gult
lodge
would
become
of
member
of
Section
12-B
of
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
that
also
included
the
following
lodges:
Royaneh
#282
(San
Francisco),
Kaweah
#379
(Alameda),
Stanford-Ojato
#207
(Stanford),
Mow-A-Toc
#262
(Eureka)
and
Swegedaigea 263 (Napa).
On
October
31,
1948
the
first
annual
business
meeting
of
Machek
N’Gult
Lodge
was
held
in
the
Camp
Dimond
mess
hall.
This
would
also
be
the
last
meeting
the
lodge
would
ever
hold
at
Dimond
due
to
the
forced
sale
of
the
camp
to
the
Oakland
Public
Schools.
At
this
meeting
seven
new
ordeal
members
were
inducted
into
the
Order
and
members
of
Royaneh
Lodge
would
stage
the
first
brotherhood
ceremony.
During
its
first
year
as
a
lodge
78
members
were
inducted
into
Machek
N’Gult.
With
the
closing
of
Camp
Dimond
at
the
end
of
1948,
Camp
Dimond-O
and
Los
Mochos
became
the
two
locations
for
ceremonies
and
ordeals
by
the
Lodge.
Camp
Dimond
will
always
be
known
as
the
location
where
Machek
N’Gult
lodge
was
founded.
Since
Dimond-O
could
not
be
used
during
the
winter
months,
Los
Mochos
was
used
as
the
main
site
for ceremonies between October and May.
The
Arrow
Point,
the
official
newsletter
of
Machek
N’Gult
lodge
was
first
published
in
January
of
1949
as
a
way
to
provide
additional
communication to its members. Some sixty years later, the Arrow Point continues to be the newsletter of our combined lodges.
In
July
of
1949,
Machek
N’Gult
Lodge
had
the
honor
of
inducting
a
new
lodge
into
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
during
ceremonies
held
at
the
Redwood
Area
Council’s
Camp
Tish
Tang
along
the
banks
of
the
Trinity
River
in
Humboldt
County.
Machek
N’Gult
helped
setup
the
ceremonies
site and inducted the first 18 members into the new lodge that would be known as Mow-A-Toc lodge 262.
Between
1949
and
early
1950
OA
founder
E.
Urner
Goodman
constructed
a
stone
fireplace
in
his
barn
which
became
known
as
the
Brotherhood
Barn
in
Bondville,
Vermont.
A
few
OA
Lodges
from
across
the
Country
sent
rocks
to
Goodman
that
were
inscribed
with
the
name
or number of their Lodge that were incorporated into the stone fireplace.
Although
Machek
N’Gult
does
not
have
their
name
on
one
of
the
rocks,
one
of
the
rocks
in
the
fireplace
is
inscribed
with
the
Camp
Dimond-O
logo
<O>.
The
<O>
rock
was
submitted
by
Machek
N’Gult
and
Dimond-O
staff
members
Frank
Zografos
and
Gordon
Osborne.
Machek
N’Gult
is
one
of
only
a
handful
of
lodges
to
have
a
permanent
fixture
in
the
Goodman
fireplace.
The
Dimond-O
rock
is
located
in
the
center
of
the
mantel and directly above the fireplace opening.
On
October
6,
1951,
a
vigil
ceremony
was
held
at
Camp
Royaneh
by
Royaneh
Lodge
where
Don
MacDougal
received
the
first
Vigil
honor
in
Machek
N’Gult
lodge.
Don
MacDougal
was
the
main
motivating
force
behind
the
founding
of
Machek
N’Gult
in
1947
when
the
first
25
members
were
inducted
into
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
and
for
his
efforts
he
was
honored
as
being
the
first
vigil
member
of
Machek
N’Gult
lodge.
At this same time the lodge had expanded from those initial 25 members in 1947 to 249 arrowmen by the end of 1952.
In
the
summer
of
1953,
Machek
N’Gult
brotherhood
member
Ed
Crinnion
was
involved
in
one
of
the
most
iconic
scout
paintings
of
all
time.
It
was
at
the
National
Jamboree
in
Irvine,
CA
that
artist
Normal
Rockwell
was
staging
a
photo-shoot
for
a
new
painting.
An
actor
was
portraying
a
scoutmaster
watching
over
his
troop
of
sleeping
scouts.
The
scouts
sleeping
in
the
made-up
tents
were
all
from
Troop
95
of
the
Oakland
Council
including
young
scout
Howard
Lincoln
(the
President
of
the
Seattle
Mariners
baseball
team).
Ed
was
also
a
member
of
Troop
95
and
was
helping
his
troop
during
the
photo-shoot.
The
actor
though
came
wearing
the
wrong
type
of
shoes
that
could
not
be
used
in
the
picture.
Ed
did
his
good
deed
and
lent
the
boots
off
his
own
feet
to
the
actor.
The
iconic
Rockwell
painting
that
was
completed
a
few
years
later
would
be
known
as
“The
Scoutmaster”.
But
the
boots
that
are
worn
by
the
Scoutmaster
in
the
painting
are
from
Machek
N’Gult
member
and
Eagle
Scout Edmund Crinnion.
One
of
the
highlights
of
1954
was
the
Area
12-B
conclave
held
up
in
the
town
of
Eureka.
Thirty-seven
arrowmen
from
Machek
N’Gult
gathered
for
the
two-day
event.
The
transportation
to
and
from
the
conclave
was
courtesy
of
a
United
States
Coast
Guard
plane
which
was
flying
an
orienteering
flight
from
Oakland
to
Eureka.
At
the
conclave
Jim
Johnson
from
Hayward
was
elected
Area
12-B
section
chief.
In
October
of
the
same
year
the
members
of
Machek
N’Gult
lodge
labored
hard
to
develop
the
council
property
across
the
creek
from
the
main
gate
at
Los
Mochos. This location would become known as Cardiac Hill due to the steep climb that was necessary to get to the site.
Ordeal
and
Brotherhood
ceremonies
would
be
held
atop
the
second
rock
outcropping
for
forty
years
from
1954
until
the
1990’s.
For
years
smudge
pots
were
placed
along
the
trail
that
led
the
way
up
to
the
rock
and
illuminating
the
entire
hillside.
In
November
of
the
same
year
another plane ride took 24 members on an excursion over Yosemite and Camp Dimond-O.
According
to
the
Arrow
Point
newsletter
from
January
of
1957,
the
first
pocket
flap
(known
as
the
F1)
was
issued
by
Machek
N’Gult
for
a
mere
$0.40
a
piece
(the
same
patch
can
be
found
on
eBay
these
days
for
over
$150).
During
January
1957
it
was
decided
to
divide
Machek
N’Gult
into
two
Chapters.
Chapter
1
would
handle
the
Sunset,
Lake,
Central
&
Castle
districts
(the
Oakland
area)
while
Chapter
2
would
handle
the
Chabot,
Arroyo,
Redwood,
South,
Twin
Valley
&
Mission
Peak
districts
(Castro
Valley,
Hayward,
Fremont
&
Pleasanton
area).
This
was
done
to
make the lodge operations easier to handle.
The
legend
of
Eden
Chapter
is
believed
to
have
begun
during
this
same
time
period
when
a
group
of
Scouters
upset
over
the
new
chapter
alignment
tried
to
create
their
own
chapter
in
the
lodge.
Eden
was
not
a
council
district
but
an
area
known
as
Eden
Township
and
located
in
present
day
Hayward
near
the
area
of
Chabot
Community
College.
The
township
was
incorporated
into
the
City
of
Hayward
in
the
late
1950’s.
The
members
of
the
new
chapter
went
as
far
as
to
create
their
own
pocket
patch
using
the
distinctive
totem
of
the
golden
bear
with
Eden
Chapter
proudly
displayed.
The
chapter
did
not
succeed
and
its
members
continued
on
in
the
Lodge.
The
patch
created
for
Eden
Chapter
has
become
one
of
the
rarest
Lodge
Patches
associated
with
Machek
N’Gult.
Some
patch
collectors
have
even
suggested
that
the
Eden
Chapter
patch
predates
the
first
Machek
N’Gult
patch
and
was
the
first
pocket
flap
in
the
entire
state
of
California.
We
have
never
been
able
to
find
any
proof supporting that theory.
In 1962, members Jerry Abad, Jim Bowles and other Machek members performed a vigil ceremony at Fort Ord during a special ceremony.
Machek
N’Gult
once
again
had
the
honor
of
inducting
a
new
lodge
into
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
when
over
the
weekend
of
April
24,
1964
at
Camp
Stuart
near
Saratoga,
the
Lodge
inducted
88
youth
and
9
adult
members
into
Miwok
Lodge
439
of
the
Santa
Clara
Council.
Two
months
earlier,
on
February
10,
the
Oakland
Council
and
the
San
Francisco
Council
merged
forming
the
San
Francisco
Bay
Area
Council.
The
induction
ceremony for Miwok Lodge would be one of the final tasks of Machek N’Gult lodge before it merged with Royaneh Lodge.
Seventeen
years
after
Machek
N’Gult
was
formed
at
Camp
Dimond
in
the
Oakland
hills
in
1947,
the
last
official
business
of
the
lodge
took
place
on
December
13th,
1964
at
a
joint
banquet
and
business
meeting
held
at
Goodman’s
restaurant
in
Oakland’s
Jack
London
Square.
Royaneh
Lodge 282 and Machek N’Gult Lodge 375 would merge forming the new Order of the Arrow lodge of the SFBAC.
.
Machek N’Gult Lodge 375 History
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