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  • 'I have a lifetime of memories': Kangian, 86,recently was honored by

    Philadelphia Inquirer, PA
    April 23 2006

    'I have a lifetime of memories'Active in the Boy Scouts for 75 years,
    George Kangian, 86, recently was honored by the group.

    By Rusty Pray
    Inquirer Staff Writer

    The trophies George Kangian displays in his living room, the
    mementoes he spreads out on his kitchen table, the thick scrapbook he
    keeps in a safe place - all chronicle the life he chose to lead.

    Kangian, who grew up in West Philadelphia and who has lived in Cherry
    Hill for 40 years, has led a Boy Scout's life - literally. Kangian,
    86, has been active in the Boy Scouts on one side of the Delaware
    River or the other for 75 years.

    Seventy-five years is a long time to live, let alone be affiliated
    with a single organization.

    "I have a lifetime of memories," he said. "I have no regrets."

    Southern New Jersey Council officials say that although Kangian is
    not the oldest person in scouting in South Jersey - there's a
    100-year-old Eagle Scout - he is the longest continuously registered
    official in the council. He is a commissioner who supervises 10
    troops or Cub Scout packs in Cherry Hill.

    The council recently honored him with an award for his years of
    service.

    "As a 75-year veteran of scouting, George has... impacted the lives
    of thousands of youth and adults," said Ron Pierson, the council's
    assistant executive. "Even with 75 years in scouting, George's
    passion for the program, and his desire to guide and inspire youth
    and adults, has not waned."

    Impact is a two-way street. There is little in Kangian's life that
    was not influenced by the Boy Scouts. He and his wife, Mary, were
    married 61 years ago at Northminster Presbyterian Church, where he
    attended scout meetings as a youth. He named his only son, Robert,
    after a scoutmaster he admired.

    The Kangians also have a daughter, Marsha Marshall, who lives in
    Haddonfield. His granddaughter, Alexandra Marshall, typed and edited
    a short memoir he wrote of his years in scouting.

    By Kangian's estimation, he has spent 6,000 hours attending troop
    meetings - not counting training, camping, or the time he has devoted
    to various committees.

    "I knew him growing up," Mary Kangian said. "All he would do is talk
    Boy Scouts, Boy Scouts, Boy Scouts. My mother asked me, 'Why does he
    go to Boy Scouts? How much do they pay him? I told her, 'Mom, he's
    not paid.' She said, 'He's crazy.' "

    "When I was young, everybody thought I was an oddball," he said.
    "Now, I'm an old oddball."

    Kangian, the son of an Armenian immigrant, joined Troop 113 in 1931,
    just 21 years after the Boy Scouts of America was incorporated in the
    United States.

    "I had two sisters, and I was the only boy in the family. I didn't
    want to be a sissy, so I joined the Boy Scouts," said Kangian, an
    Army Air Corps veteran of World War II who flew more than 50 missions
    in Europe as a ball-turret gunner in a B-24.

    Joining the scouts put him on the path documented by the markers he
    keeps around him.

    There's the trophy from Troop 113 honoring him for 20 years of
    service. There's the plaque given to him by an Armenian Boy Scout
    troop he visited while on vacation in Jerusalem. He said they were
    refugees from Iraq and Iran.

    Among the items in the thick scrapbook is an autograph from James E.
    West, one of the founders of the Boy Scouts of America. Kangian got
    West's signature when he attended the first national jamboree in 1937
    in Washington. There's memorabilia of the troops he organized in the
    city while working for the Philadelphia Housing Authority.

    The memories remind Kangian why he stayed so long in scouting.

    "If I've helped one boy or one leader, then I'm one very happy old
    scout," he said.

    http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/loc al/states/new_jersey/counties/camden_county/143928 11.htm
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