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APO Insignia
This might have come up before but I couldn't find it and I wanted to hear the opinions of members from other chapters.
I was talking to a former chapter brother now alumnus and we were talking about APO insignia; badges, pins, etc. We were questioning the reason why we still use the service pin when the least expensive badge is less than $50 with shipping and handling. However, that's not the question I wanted to ask. I wanted to know how many of us as brothers own APO insignia beyond the service pin, letters, DSKs and other common things. How many have rings or badges (or other things) and if you don't what would you like to see nationals carry/ provide. For example: I have my letters engraved on the stone of my graduation ring. This way I didn't have to buy a brotherhood ring and a class ring this one can serve for both. I also have the plain badge, but I passed that down to my little before I graduated. That's what I have (or had once) however, I wish nationals would have a true brotherhood ring, something simple with maybe our crest on it or an engraving of the badge. The rings they have on the jeweler's site are pretty bland and generic in my opinion. |
We're cheap...
APO's tradition of using (to quote my wife) "cheap crap" as for our pins goes back to at least prior to WWII. I'm not sure relative to inflation how much we've gone up or down, but as best as I can tell, our service pins have run about as much as a big fast food meal for most of our history. And while the Pledge pins have been somewhat different (apparently *really* early in our history (pre 1932?) they were shields split into two colored halves).
Oddly enough I don't own anything APO which is jeweled. The main things that I've paid money for on Ebay have been things like Brotherhood certificates from the 1950s, patches and pins from Alpha Phi Omega groups that aren't us... |
As someone who collections APO stuff and studies our history, I can add a few things.
The use of service pins & pledge pins dates from 1939 (pledge pin)/1941 (service pin). The service pin was created to give us a low-cost alternative to the badge, which remains the basic emblem of membership. The first service pin cost about 25cents vs $3-4 bucks for the badge. Today the service pin runs $5 vs $40 for the badge. $40 is a LOT for many people, especially students, which is why we still use the service pin (heck, when I got the badge about 10 years ago it was around $20). I can't believe anyone who seriously question why we still use the service pin... For myself, I have many APO items in my personal collection. For basic wear, I wear my Life Member pin. For more formal occasions, I'll wear my badge with chapter guard & dangles, prehaps with my Torchbearer pin. I have 3 DSKs and the Horton Award, which I'll also wear when appropiate. I really can't think of any additional items I'd like to see the National Store carry, beyond what it is. I do think an advisor pin or badge might be an idea, but don't know if I'll ever propose it or not. |
I have a Life Member pin, and for some reason I have a pledge pin. It is not my pledge pin and I do not know how I ended up with it.
I finally replaced my badge which I broke. It's the ritziest version of the cheaper metal kind. I have a chapter guard, but I am not sure if I have any officer dangles. I also have one of the plain gold lapel pins with the greek letters Alpha Phi Omega. Although I am not a pin collector, I would be in favor of more jeweled items as appropriate. |
Afterthought:
I would like to see 25 and 50-year member pins. It would be a great way to honor the older brothers in my alumni association(s). |
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In Toastmasters we have numbered tabs that go under our member pins, so the numbered part hangs below the pin.
Something like that would be nice, along with a certificate. |
At the Nationals banquet in Boston, I wore a heart shaped boyscout pin (I know its not APO, but I thought it was pretty appropriate! ;o) and I wore the APO sweetheart pin that was given to me by my chapter president as a gift.
Does anyone know anything about the Sweetheart pin's history? I don't have a badge.. yet. Lol. |
Goes back quite a way...
I know the sweetheart pin goes back before con-con, and I think it goes back to around WWII. I'll see if I can find anything definite.
Not listed in the 1965-1966 pledge manual (http://apoko.abetterplacetobe.org/Ca...e%20Manual.pdf), but I'm pretty sure it goes back farther than that. :( |
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"heart shaped" boy scout pin? That could only be the Life Scout pin, which is a boy scout rank. If you (or your son) did not earn that rank it would be inappropriate to wear it. Sweetheart pin. Yes, I know a lot about the history of it, as I collect APO insignia and do research on them. It was actually created in 1968. I have the issue of the T&T in which this was announced and shows the pin. While we have had chapter sweethearts for decades, it wasn't until then that the pin was create. The purpose was to allow Brothers (or chapters) to recognize their (non-Brother) sweethearts. Nowadays I see Brothers giving them to other Brothers, as well as female Brothers giving them to their non-Brother male 'sweethearts'. The pin was dropped by the Board in 1998, but later brought back. |
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I know that some fraternities allow daughters to wear their insignia. Are their any exceptions like this in the scouting world? In the APO world? :) |
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Just curious. |
In the scouting world, when it comes to advancement awards its pretty much the boy must earn the award to wear it. Mother minature pins were created early on, and you will see moms with a ribbon with all their mother pins on them. For Eagle, there are Mother, Father, and now mentor pins. I guess dads could also wear the minatures, but I never see that except for Eagle.
There is no tradition in the BSA of sons/daughters wearing their father's rank pins or the mother pins, except in the case of sons who ALSO earned the award wearing it. (ie a boy earns Eagle, and wears his dad's Eagle medal). Keep in mind that another standard in the BSA is that 'rank advancement is for youth'. By and large, once you age out you stop wearing any rank insignia, tho wearing the Eagle medal at formal occasions and wearing the Eagle square knot on the uniform is encouraged. Life Scout was the highest rank I earned, but I no longer wear it in any form. AFAIK, there is no tradition of children wearing their parent's APO insignia. As we have been co-ed for 25+ years, it would be very confusing. Are they a Brother, or just wearing their father's (or possible mother's) insignia??? The Sweetheart pin was intended for your SO, not your children. I can't speak of other GLO's traditions in this area. As to 'den monther for a troop'. It could be a case of an informal relationship, not a formal position. You are correct that Den Mothers are leaders of Cub Scout Dens, NOT Boy Scout Troop leaders. Could be this term was used for the scoutmaster's wife or the like. Many troops in the past had troop mothers that helped out a lot (an unofficial 'mother's auxiliary' if you will). Certainly, things have now changed since women can hold ANY leadership position in any scout unit. Back in the days when they were pretty much limited to certain cub scout positions, there were informal roles that occured. |
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If you are below age 50 and the pin you are wearing has a screw back then it is your father's (not sure when we went from screwback to the pinback, 1960's). Is there *anything* that amounts to a guide to how to use the sweetheart pin? It seems like APO caught on to the concept of the sweetheart pin just in time for things to get complicated enough for a guide to no longer make sense. Between co-ed chapters and out of the closet brothers (of both genders) I'm just not sure. Both chapter sweethearts and chapter courts are mostly memories. As for Den Mother in a troop, the only thing that springs to mind is some of the oddities of the 11 year old patrol in Scouting in the LDS church, but even that doesn't quite make it. |
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