Twenty-eight
years
after
the
San
Francisco
Council
was
organized,
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
in
San
Francisco
was
officially
established
on
November
29,
1944.
This
took
place
at
the
monthly
executive
board
meeting
held
at
the
San
Francisco
Council
office
at
105
Montgomery
Street,
when
a
motion
was
made
by
board
member
William
Wollner
and
approved
by
the
board
to
apply
for
a
national
charter
to
form
an
Order
of
the
Arrow
lodge.
Mr.
Wollner
indicated
that
there
would
be
a
chapter
at
both
Camp
Lilienthal
and
Camp
Moore
(formerly
Camp
Royaneh)
and
made
up
of
honor
campers.
The
chapter
at
Camp
Lilienthal
would
be
known
as
the
“Lamat”
tribe
and
the
chapter
at
Camp
Moore
(Royaneh)
would
be
known
as
the
“Maidu”
tribe.
The
purpose
of
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
as
stated
at
the
meeting
was
for
Camp
promotions.
The
application
fee
for
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
charter
was
a
mere
$10.00.
Royaneh
Lodge
would
become
an
official
Order
of
the
Arrow
Lodge
of
Section
12-B
on
February
25,
1945
when
National
approved
its
charter
and
assigned
the
number
282.
The
numbering
of
the
Lodge
was
based
on
the
sequence
order
of
when
the
Lodges
was
chartered
and
not
founded.
All
persons
who
held
membership
in
the
lodge
prior to February 25, 1945 were known as Charter Members. As a service organization the roots of Royaneh Lodge date back to 1943.
Arthur
Myer,
the
first
Eagle
Scout
in
California
(where
he
received
the
award
in
1916
from
the
Bakersfield
council)
and
a
member
of
the
San
Francisco
Council
since
1923
helped
organize
the
new
lodge.
Six
years
earlier
in
1938
the
council
had
renamed
Camp
Royaneh
to
Camp
Moore
in
honor
of
Charles
C
Moore,
the
former
President
of
the
San
Francisco
Council
and
Vice
President
of
the
Boy
Scouts
of
America.
During
this
timeframe
from
1938
until
the
early
1950’s,
the
San
Francisco
council
simply
referred
to
their
two
permanent
Scout
camps
(Moore
and
Lilienthal)
as
“Royaneh
camps”.
Because
the
new
lodge
would
have
chapters
at
both
Scout
camps,
the
name
chosen
for
the
new
lodge
was
“Royaneh”
to
reflect
the
reference
that
the
council
used
in
1944
for
their
camps.
Royaneh
Lodge
was
not
named
after
Camp
Royaneh
as
it
technically did not exist in the 1940’s.
The
name
Royaneh
though
came
about
in
March
of
1925
when
SF
Scout
Executive
Raymond
O
Hanson
held
a
competition
among
the
scouts
to
name
their
new
summer
camp
in
Cazadero.
A
scout
by
the
name
of
George
Hart
from
San
Francisco
Troop
54
won
the
competition
by
submitting
the
name
“Royaneh”
for
the
new
camp.
George
indicated
that
the
meaning
of
the
word
“Royaneh”
came
from
the
Iroquois
Indians
that
meant
“camp
of
joy”
or
“Meeting
place
of
the
tribes”.
So
the
best
translation,
based
on
the
interpretation
of
the
boy
that
came
up
with
the
name Royaneh and also used for Royaneh Lodge Order of the Arrow means “Meeting Place of the Tribes”.
According
to
the
Royaneh
bylaws
the
totem
used
by
Royaneh
Lodge
was
a
yellow
arrowhead
with
the
blue
profile
of
an
Indian
chief
centered
upon
it.
The
totem
is
similar
to
the
Indian
head
that
was
also
used
at
both
Camp
Moore
and
Camp
Lilienthal
at
that
same
time.
The
Indian
head
patch
used
at
the
two
camps
was
a
left
facing
Indian
head,
but
the
Indian
head
used
by
Royaneh
lodge
would
be
a
right
facing
Indian
Head
(possibly
to
distinguish
it
from
the
camp
or
the
OA
saying
“it
is
only
right”).
Before
the
Lodge
was
officially
formed,
the
early
members
used the standard camp patch.
The
newsletter
of
Royaneh
Lodge
was
known
as
the
“Royanehan”
and
was
first
published
in
February
of
1945
when
the
lodge
received
its
charter.
In
July
1947
members
of
Royaneh
Lodge
inducted
the
first
5
members
of
the
Oakland
Area
Council
into
the
Order
of
the
Arrow.
Three
months
later
in
October,
Royaneh
Lodge
would
hold
the
first
ever
ordeal
ceremony
for
the
Oakland
Council
when
25
members
became
ordeal
members.
Documents
from
1949
indicated
that
the
lodge
held
five
conclaves
(lodge
gatherings)
each
year.
The
fall
Business
Conclave
was
held
in
October,
the
camp
promotion
Conclave
was
held
in
November,
the
annual
banquet
was
held
in
January,
the
Camp
Kick-Off
Conclave
was
held
in
May
and
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
day
was
held
in
July
up
at
Camp
Moore
(Royaneh).
Two
of
the
five
conclaves
were
social
gatherings
(Banquet
&
OA
day)
where
lodge
business
could
not
be
conducted.
In
November
of
1950
at
the
fall
business
conclave
the
decision
was
made
to get neckerchiefs for Lodge members. Initially 60 neckerchiefs were ordered at $1.35 each.
In
January
of
1952,
Royaneh
Lodge
had
the
honor
of
inducting
a
new
lodge
into
the
Order
of
the
Arrow
during
ceremonies
held
at
Camp
Lilienthal
in
Marin
County.
Thirty
seven
arrowmen
from
the
Mt
Diablo
Council
were
inducted
into
the
order
of
the
arrow
for
a
new
lodge
that
would
be
known
as
OO-Yum-Buli
lodge
468
(merged
with
Swegedaigea
#263
in
1994
to
form
Ut-in
Silica
Lodge
58).
Arthur
Myer
one
of
the
founding members of Royaneh lodge lived in Berkeley and also helped to organize Oo-Yum-Buli as well as being a member of that lodge.
According
to
the
Royanehan
newsletter,
a
silver
gavel
was
used
by
the
lodge
chief
to
conduct
business.
In
1954,
Ed
Dike
was
the
first
person
in
Royaneh
Lodge
history
to
be
honored
with
the
Distinguished
Service
Award.
The
“DSA”
is
the
highest
honor
that
the
National
Order
of
the
Arrow
can
bestow
upon
a
member.
Ed
Dike
was
the
nature
director
at
Camp
Moore/Camp
Royaneh
for
many
years
as
well
as
being
a
leader
with
Royaneh
Lodge.
Five
years
later
in
1958
Royaneh
Lodge
would
dedicate
the
new
Chiefs
Room
at
Camp
Royaneh
in
his
honor.
During
that
same
year,
Royaneh
Lodge
chief
Ross
Heil
designed
the
first
pocket
patch
known
as
the
F1.
Until
that
first
pocket
flap
was
released,
neckerchiefs with patches indicated membership in the Royaneh lodge. Ross Heil would later become the section chief in 1960.
Larry Teshara, Royaneh Lodge Chief from 1962, was elected National Deputy Chief of the Order of the Arrow in 1963.
Twenty
years
after
it
was
formed
in
1944,
the
last
official
business
of
Royaneh
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 to form the new lodge of the SFBAC.
.
Royaneh Lodge 282 History
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