Staff Photo
 
 

This campsite was named in honor of World War II hero Douglas MacArthur. 

MacArthur opened in the former location of Lindbergh in the late 40's.  In 1964 MacArthur was closed and provisional was moved to Wilderness.  Since that time MacArthur has been used peroidically as the CIT site.


 

MacArthur Campsite and cabin 
1952
(Click image to see it larger)

Photo courtesy Don Richards

MacArthur Council Ring 
1952
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Photo courtesy Don Richards


MacArthur Campsite
Tents #4 through #8
(Click image to see it larger)

Photo courtesy Don Richards

MacArthur Troop 1946
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Photo courtesy Peter Fullerton


Jim Kilbride of Troop 22 
Writing home 1948 
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Photo Courtesy Coby Currier

About Douglas MacArthur

General of the Army Douglas MacArthur,  (January 26, 1880 – April 5, 1964) was an American general and Field Marshal of the Philippine Army. He was a Chief of Staff of the United States Army during the 1930s and later played a prominent role in the Pacific theater of World War II, one of the war's most decorated soldiers, receiving the Medal of Honor for his early service in the Philippines and on the Bataan Peninsula. He was designated to command the proposed invasion of Japan in November 1945. When that was no longer necessary, he officially accepted the nation's surrender on September 2, 1945.

MacArthur oversaw the Occupation of Japan from 1945 to 1951. Although criticized for protecting Emperor Hirohito and the imperial family from prosecution for war crimes, MacArthur is credited with implementing far-reaching democratic reforms in that country. He led the United Nations Command forces defending South Korea against the North Korean invasion from 1950 to 1951. On April 11, 1951 MacArthur was removed from command by President Harry S. Truman for publicly disagreeing with Truman's Korean War Policy.

MacArthur is credited with the military dictum, "In war, there is no substitute for victory" but he also warned, "The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war." He fought in three major wars (World War I, World War II, Korean War) and was one of only five men ever to rise to the rank of General of the Army.

Douglas MacArthur, the youngest of three brothers, was born in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1880 in an upstairs room of the Tower Building of the Little Rock Arsenal, which was at the time an active military building, while his parents were briefly stationed there. His parents were Lieutenant General Arthur MacArthur, Jr. (at the time a captain), a recipient of the Medal of Honor, and Mary Pinkney Hardy MacArthur (nicknamed "Pinky") of Norfolk, Virginia. Douglas MacArthur was the grandson of jurist and politician Arthur MacArthur, Sr., a Scottish immigrant. (The remainder of MacArthur's ancestry was English.) He was baptized at Christ Episcopal Church in Little Rock on May 16, 1880. In his memoir Reminiscences, MacArthur wrote that his first memory was the sound of the bugle, and that he had learned to "ride and shoot even before I could read or write—indeed, almost before I could walk and talk."

~Wikipedia




Page design and layout by:
Dean B. Zaharis
Created: November 7, 2008
Last Update: March 15, 2024
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