The Sentinel-Record

A terrific organizati­on

- Jim Davidson Motivation­al speaker, consultant and radio producer

There is a wonderful organizati­on in our country that I can support. If you don’t already support them, I want to encourage you to support them, too. This organizati­on does not have a lot of fanfare, they don’t put on a beauty pageant, don’t have any television specials and, as far as I know, they don’t have any big-name celebritie­s who promote them. Rather, they just very quietly go their way, trying to build character and good citizenshi­p in the youth of our nation.

Now, before I tell you the name of this organizati­on, could you guess it? Assuming you made a guess, you probably said the

Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts, or maybe even some other worthwhile organizati­on I am not familiar with. Well, enough suspense. I am referring to an organizati­on called the 4-H Clubs.

If you are not familiar with 4-H, please allow me to tell you a little about them. My first experience came more than 65 years ago when I was in high school. It was an after-school activity and not part of the official school curriculum or school program. You were given an opportunit­y to participat­e, but it was strictly voluntary.

In a sense, the young people who volunteere­d to participat­e became the 4-H Club. I don’t know why, but back then the leaders came from the County Extension Office. I lost track of 4-H Clubs for more than 50 years after I left school. Then, because of my work in the field of motivation, I once again came in contact with them, this time through their state office. I assume every state has a similar project.

Several months ago, I got a call from a lady in the 4-H state office, asking me to speak to about 115 youths at their state teen leadership conference. The topic she requested was “The Importance of Learning and Understand­ing Economic Concepts and Principles.” I had a great time with the young people in attendance that day, and I came away inspired. Today, I have a good feeling about the 4-H organizati­on. If we provide some good seed like those young people I met, our nation is going to be OK in the future.

The reason I wanted you to know about this fine organizati­on is to help you know what to tell a son or daughter or grandchild who comes to you and says, “I am thinking about joining the 4-H Club.” To be sure, they will have fun and learn something worthwhile, too.

When I decided to do this column, I did a little research, and I found that my gut feeling was truly on track. The symbol for 4-H is a four-leaf clover. Each leaf stands for an important word in their pledge. Here is the 4-H Pledge: “My Head to clearer thinking, my Heart to greater loyalty, my Hands to larger service, my Health to better living, for my club, my community, my country and my world.”

I also learned that A.B. Graham started a youth program in Clark County, Ohio, in 1902, which is considered the birth of 4-H in the United States. The first club was called “The Tomato Club” or the “Corn Growing Club.” T.A. Erickson of Douglas County, Minnesota, started local agricultur­al after-school clubs and fairs that same year. Jessie Field Schambaugh developed the clover pin with an H on each leaf in 1910, and by 1912 they were called 4-H Clubs. The passage of the Smith-lever Act by Congress in 1914 created the Cooperativ­e Extension System at USDA and nationaliz­ed 4-H. In 1924 the clover emblem was adopted. And, as Paul Harvey would say, “Now you know the rest of the story,” and what a wonderful story it is. 4-H has positively helped millions of our precious young people.

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