Boy Scouts of America Greater Alabama Council: Difference between revisions

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(New page: The '''Greater Alabama Council''' (Council #1) of the Boy Scouts of America covers most of northern and western Alabama, including most of the Birmingham District. The Council's m...)
 
(Where?)
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* [[Birmingham District (Boy Scouts)|Birmingham District]] ([[Jefferson County]])
* [[Birmingham District (Boy Scouts)|Birmingham District]] ([[Jefferson County]])
* Cheaha District
* Cheaha District
* [[Cherokee District]] ([[Cherokee County|Cherokee]] and [[Dekalb County|Dekalb]] Counties)
* [[Cherokee District]] (Western Jefferson County)
* [[Choccolocco District]] ([[Calhoun County]])
* [[Choccolocco District]] ([[Calhoun County]])
* Etowah District
* Etowah District
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* [[Shelby District]] ([[Shelby]] County)
* [[Shelby District]] ([[Shelby]] County)
* Talakto District (Madison County)
* Talakto District (Madison County)
* [[Vulcan District]] (Jefferson County)
* [[Vulcan District]] (Southern(?) Jefferson County)
* Westmoreland District (Colbert, Franklin, and Lauderdale Counties)
* Westmoreland District (Colbert, Franklin, and Lauderdale Counties)



Revision as of 15:05, 28 September 2007

The Greater Alabama Council (Council #1) of the Boy Scouts of America covers most of northern and western Alabama, including most of the Birmingham District. The Council's main office is located at 516 Liberty Parkway in Birmingham.

History

In the 1990s, the Boy Scouts of America restructured their organization to help reduce manpower. The resulted in many small councils across the country merging into one larger one. The Greater Alabama Council is one of these, having formed from the merger of three smaller councils, the Central Alabama, Choccolocco, and Tennessee Valley Councils, on January 1, 1998. The merged Council retained Choccolocco's council number (1), which it had received by being based in the alphabetically first city of Anniston in the alphabetically first state of Alabama.

Organization

The Greater Alabama Council is divided into 14 districts:

References

  • Henderson, Ed. (March 17, 2002). "Alabama Boy Scout Council History" [1]. Scouting-E-zine, vol. 4, no. 6 [2]. Accessed September 28, 2007.
  • Greater Alabama Council [3]. (September 16, 2007). Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Accessed September 28, 2007.

External links