Staff Photo
 
Built in 1950, the Bates Cabin was sponsored by the Bates Manufacturing Company, headquartered in Lewiston and with other mills in Maine.  It was intended as a year-round base camp for Scout troops, with special consideration given to troops in the towns where Bates had operations.  The cabin was opened to camping when Post 22 of South Portland moved seven sets of triple bunks from the Training Center in the fall of 1950.  The cabin featured an oil-fired kitchen range and a wood-fired Franklin stove in the main room.  Water was obtained from the Training Center and a dry well which never worked properly caught the water drained from the sink.  A latrine was constructed at the left rear of the cabin; that structure has been moved, remodeled and replaced several times through the years.

Due to fire safety considerations the oil stove was removed in the seventies and a better wood stove now provides the only heat.  In order to circulate that heat the archway between front and back rooms was widened by Frank Maguire. You can see the insert in the floor where the wall used to be. There was never a door between the two areas.

Did you ever wonder how the electricity gets to Bates Cabin?  When the cabin was built a power cable was laid from the training center under the road and underground across the field about halfway to Bates. For reasons unknown it was then run up a utility pole from which it went overhead the rest of the way.  In the sixties we decided that the pole was too much of an obstruction in the field, then used for ball games most evenings.  At the spring work party a volunteer was found with electrical skills, who got a special kit for underground splicing of the wires and then ran the wire the remainder of the route to the cabin under the sod.

These days Bates Cabin is used for short-term (weekend) camping by Cub Packs and Scout Troops throughout the year.  It is also used for several council activities such as Winter Camp (February vacation week), Fly First Class (April Vacation), Casco Bay District Cub Scout Day Camp during the summer and various training courses including Wood Badge.



 
 
(Click any photo below to see it larger.
Some have two levels of enlargement)
Back Side of Bates Cabin 1950's
Fred Foster at Bates 1950's
Bates in the winter
Day Camp at Bates
Day Camp at Bates
Tim Reidman & David Grey at Bates Cabin 1977
Note the triple bunks in the doorway
Model Campsite from 
Wood Badge at Bates Cabin
October 2007
Inside Bates Cabin - 1981
Note Triple bunks
Inside Bates Cabin - 1981
Note Triple bunks

Inside Bates Cabin - 2010
Inside Bates Cabin - 2010
Inside Bates Cabin - 2010

Inside Bates Cabin - 2010

Bates is in the upper right-hand corner of this 1951 aerial photo

Additional commentary from Frank Maguire:
I just looked at the full aerial photo (click the image above) - it's a wonderful time capsule. I could see the original ell between the training center barns and the house, the big opening leading under the back barn into the cellar area, what looks like an opening under the garage, which hadn't been there too long, the original camp gate with the sign unreadable, the stone wall next to Bates which then led across the field towards the Plains Road, the other stone wall on the other side of the road, the amazing amount of open space behind and beside Bates, now thickly wooded, the five big "Balm-of-Gilead" poplar trees in front of the Training Center, etc.




Page design and layout by:
Dean B. Zaharis
Created: September 29, 2010
Last Update: May 7, 2022
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