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A Letter from Chuck – Robin Hood, A History Part 1

I would like to give a brief history of Robin Hood. Our campers are always interested and eager to learn about the history and at campfires throughout the summer I am asked to pass on the history of camp to these eager listeners.

Robin Hood was founded in 1927 by Andrew Friedman, a semi-pro football player whose dream it was to spend his life working with children in a camp that he would build and call Robin Hood. He came from the main lake of Ossipee by canoe through the channel to Broad Bay and landed on the natural sandy shore and declared this the spot. Robin Hood opened for its first season in 1928 with 49 campers and a certificate from the state of New Hampshire to open a boys camp. Pictures of those brave boys and the original permit hang on the wall behind the head table in the dining hall.

We consider ourselves one big family here at Robin Hood and many of our families go back 3 generations. If it is your son or daughters first summer in the Realm you have now joined us in that family. In our yearbook each year we devote several pages with pictures of campers with their parents and siblings.

Chuck Illig – Head Counselor

From Camper to Staff – Transitions at Summer Camp

My name is Jackson Pollock and I am the Saxon Group Leader this summer. I am from Cleveland, Ohio and will be a Junior at the University of Miami, Florida.

This is my 13th summer at the Realm and 4th working as a counselor. For the past 3 summers, I was working in the Junior Camp division at Camp, working with kids between 6 and 10 years old. When I got assigned to this division my first year as a counselor I was a little nervous at the large task at hand. I always thought I would be a counselor for an older group of kids, however since my first day as a junior camp counselor I felt I was in the right place. Last summer I was the group leader for the youngest group the TPJs. The TPJs include campers ages 6-9. As the group leader, I had to be very vigilant about what my campers were doing 24/7. Whether it was helping them make their beds, helping them fold their clothes, watching what they eat during meals, putting on sunscreen, drinking water or ensuring they were wearing clean clothes. This responsibility was a lot for a 19-year-old, but I was only able to do it successfully with my amazing counselors helping me on the TPJ staff.

This year I am the Saxon group leader. Saxons are age 16, just finishing their sophomore year of high school. Saxons are counselors in training, so half of their day consists of training to be a staff member. I spend the afternoon working on the ski boats while my Saxons are working with other groups. Going from the youngest group to the oldest group is a large change and I wasn’t sure if I was ready for it. Having junior campers for 3 years led me to forget what it was like to be a senior camper, let alone a Saxon. Although there is less of a vigilant eye on everything my campers do as 16-year-olds, there is still a lot of responsibility. After the first couple days of camp, the transition became clear to me. Once I got to know the campers in the group everything else shifted into place. I relied heavily on my fellow group leaders and Brass members to prepare me for this transition and I’m happy to say it has been a success. Having the Saxons for my final summer in the Realm is special to me. Saxon year is the last year you are a camper, so my Robin Hood experience has come full circle.

Arrival Day at Camp Robin Hood 2018

Arrival. My favorite day of the year. It’s good to be back.

Nothing matches the energy of Day 1. It’s been nine years since I experienced the pure excitement of opening day, and there is simply no substitute.

When the doors of the New York bus open, the cheering on the quad is reminiscent of a sports stadium in overtime. The only comparison I can think of for the giddy reunions – bleary-eyed hugs and trying to say hi to seven people at once – is greeting the guests at my own wedding. No other event comes close to combining the two.

Today began my 12th summer in The Realm. I was a camper for five summers, and a counselor for six, most recently in 2009. I’m returning in a new role – program director. Though most of the faces have changed since my last First Day, the emotions and the enthusiasm was exactly as I remembered it. On this day, it’s hard to imagine a greater concentration of happiness exists anywhere else in the world.

The fields and courts were prepped, the weather was great, and with each individual arrival, the positive vibes intensified. By early afternoon those courts were filled with playing children, learning and re-learning the names of the campers and counselors they’ll spend the next several weeks with.
And finally, to top it all off, an unusually great sunset over one of the best sunset-viewing-locations on Earth.

Alex Rikleen, Program Director

Camp Robin Hood Featured in 22 Best Sleepaway Camps in U.S. by Flight Network

Why are summer camps like Camp Robin Hood becoming so important today? Perhaps it’s our nostalgia for a lost time; our quest for an idyllic escape far away from the clutches of an iPhone and Snapchat. Either way we are privileged to be listed among some of the best camps in the country.

We are thrilled to be featured on Flight Networks’ 22 Best Sleepaway Camps in the U.S. Check out the article today!

The Beauty of Summer Camp

The beauty of camp is not just the scenic views on the waterfront or on the fields but the friendships, unique experience, and memories created at camp that live on for years. At Camp Robin Hood we see that beauty of camp daily and call it the magic in the trees.

We recently found an article that one father shared about what it meant to visit his son’s summer camp and remembering the beauty of his camp experience. It is a great reminder about why the time spent at summer camp is so meaningful from your first summer to 20 years later when you are sharing a memory with your child.

In this, my son’s fourth summer, I returned to camp over two decades later … It was an extraordinary seven days. Not easy, but extraordinary. I was forced by my exposure to so many kids, to look for and see my deepest sense of self. The camp asks children to be vulnerable, accepting others for the worth of their soul, not for their superficial cover. And, so while asking such from children, we adults are forced to do the same.  I observed and was moved by kids who normally wear every mask they can find to hide from the world, instead, remove the layers and serve up generosity in portions which if put together, might actually save our world.

I was moved by the depth of spirit and maturity displayed by the counselors in camp. They are barely adults themselves and yet, they hold the emotional and spiritual lives of real children, experiencing life on all ends of the human spectrum. When these same counselors return to the college campus in the fall, most of their friends will assume that their summers were carefree because they worked in camp. But the opposite is true.  These caring souls work eighteen hours a day and learn how to be mature and steady leaders because of their work. I believe that the best of them will build on their summer experiences to make meaningful and impactful lives for themselves.

Most moving, was the sense of freedom children seemed to feel by being at camp.  Not because they rule the roost, but because, in a safe environment, they are forced to independently make choices……about which activities they love, but more, how to connect in relationship. They are given room to fall down and not have a parent catch them. They don’t have parents there to micromanage their friendships. Their actions have consequences and it is not made better because of their parents’ wherewithal.

Freedom with boundaries and values says it best. All week, I observed children as they shed off their layers and found within, their deepest sense of wisdom and self. I heard children as they laid on the ground and watched the stars, talk with relief about being away from the drama of their home relationships, the constant talk of violence on television and the academic pressure to be perfect.

It is obvious that breaks from our routine are important, but this was more than mere vacation. These days away from home, school these children in character-building, value-evolution and independence-making. It is not magic; it is good old-fashioned, spiritual, wise, evolving, joyous freedom. The campers grew.  I grew. And all of us could use the time away from the same, somewhere, not for fantasy, but for independence from all which sometimes keeps us shackled.  We all deserve it.

Excerpt from The Spiritual Beauty of Summer Camp by Matt Gewirtz