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Chapel, Trinity Church Camp, Bow Lake, Strafford, New Hampshire. |
Trinity Church Camp on beautiful Bow Lake in Strafford, New Hampshire, was notable for its plain Craftsman wood architecture built strictly to serve its diverse
purposes—one structure per function, unlike the all-under-one-roof design of Camp Duncan in Bethlehem, New Hampshire (see previous post).
This, of course, meant
more nature to trudge through rain or shine for meals, chapel,
assemblies, Canteen purchases, the bathroom [tagged "the Buglights" for
special orange lightbulbs that attracted vermin away from the latrines],
the evening outdoor prayer, and—ugh—visits to Nurse Dirty Gerty (so monikered for her persnicketiness about cleanliness) at the infirmary to treat that
sunburn that singed you on the beach trip because somebody'd copped your
Coppertone.
But
all buildings were uniform in their rudimentary Craftsman construction
for optimum sturdiness, simplicity and sincerity: exposed rafters to
emphasize the roof structure, shiplap or clapboard siding to use wood to
best sealant advantage, exposed knotty-pine interiors to celebrate the
source of the building materials. Yes, unlike the grandiose resort hotels us Bretton Woods Boy Singers sang at the previous summer, architecture did not upstage nature at Trinity Church Camp, but deferred to it in its restraint, bringing us closer to nature's nurturing and healing powers.
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Cabins at Trinity Church Camp. |
The
cabins, sporting hipped roofs with projecting eaves to shelter the
screened, unglazed windows from rain and sun, housed 8-10 boys each and
were nature-named. Mine was the Owl, left rear. Others included the
Beaver, the Panther, the Wolf, the Loon, the Hawk...
...and the Eagle—though that was not the
equivalent of an Eagle Scout in rank and merit, especially not
during morning inspection: the Loon always took top honors, until the
Beaver beat them by applying more of the lodge-building industry of
their namesake water-rodent to their spic-and-spanning.
But what no
bird or beast could scrub away was, as these images suggest, the graffiti that slathered the
walls and bunkbeds with memes of Trinitarians eager to ink,
pencil, carve or spraypaint their names and years in the
annals of camp lore and yore, sometimes unwillingly: "Keith Cook wet
this mattress, July 27-August 10, 1974." (So much for the Buglights.)
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Friends Camp, Holliston, Mass. |
And how inconsistent this was with the clean "white knight" image our evening camp song (sung to the tune of O Tannenbaum) tried to instill in our young minds, as a supplement to Dirty Gerty:
Galahad our patriot knight,
Shown in spotless armor bright
So that we who bear his name
Guard our lives from blot or blame
And raise the voice of manly praise,
Of knightly deeds and ancient days,
And pledge we now ourselves to be
True knights in Christian chivalry.
At least the graffiti and the knotty pine shared a common trait: the primitive design anarchy of nature and boyhood.
But that didn't mean, as this image also conveys, that we were entirely bereft of modern perks. Each cabin had a single lightbulb—which, in the Owl, happened to hover over my bunk, setting me up for mockery when it flickered on and off to signal Lights Out: "Todd, stop fooling with the lights!"
This
may be the old Aardvark cabin, where senior campers and
counselors-in-training resided, closer to the central fields to keep
full vigil on the juniors. The simple, functional framework still stands
out, the porch being the next step of luxury befitting the elders.
Here was the camp's highest level of luxury: the Director's Lodge, boasting a
full-house treatment of double-hung windows, flood-resistant
foundations, and that gleaming hardwood floor, throw-rug, comfy chair
and stone fireplace I greened with envy for whenever I peered inside.
The trouble was, at Camp Duncan the previous year we all got a piece of that echelon of comfort. Now the grownups got it all, while we rank-and-filers had to rough it all the way.
Speaking
of which, when our PA system boomed, "All campers and staff please
report to the Knoll," we eagerly ranked-and-filed in line to get into
the Dining Hall, whose level horizontality counterbalanced the Knoll's
slope to reassure us of the nourishment that would keep us
level-headed...
...except when a food-flinging got us sent to the flagpole in time to miss dessert. The
Dining Hall's knotty-pine paneling expressed the camp's roughing-it spirit, contrasted with the elegance of generations of swimming award
plaques—which I didn't have a shot at, in light of a counselor's
comment, "That crawl needs a lot of work!"
I did, however, win laurels on Tournament Day, acing a broad-jumping
contest on the sandy strip by the Boat House. (I also won
aqua-shuffling—running into the lake, touching the dock, dashing back to
shore—and came in second in a relay race.) The Boat House, the kickstart
of all Bow Lake boatings and the changing quarters for our daily swims
(and rare skinny-dips), ranked second in domestic dignity to the
Director's Lodge.
But
the Boat House's classic New England shutters, gable, clapboards and
bracket-like rafters left greenhorn campers clueless about what went on
inside if you went up to the Counselors' Room without prior authorization: you got a Pink Belly. They'd pin your arms and legs
to the floor, lift up your shirt-front, slap your belly until it
reddened, and rub Ben-Gay on it to erase the pain. This was most
embarrassing when you went to your swims or Buglights showers all
red on your midriff, a telltale sign of your camp rules infraction. And
if you went up there a second time without a pass, you'd get a PBW: a Pink Belly followed by a
Wedgie. (But those mortifications were minuscule compared to my turning red when a
kid pitched my skivvies out onto the Boat House's launching ramp and I ran
out there in my birthday suit to fetch them, becoming an instant target
of derisive cackles from the campers.)
The building that best détented our discords under the towering trees of Trinity was Cleaves Hall. Its country-church charm recalled many regional styles: Puritan, Quaker, Shaker, Craftsman, and even
Contemporary, owing to the open-concept auditorium-stage
space its façade expressed and its rafter framework created.
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Pettijohn Chapel, Camp Crossley YMCA, North Webster, Indiana. |
It looked roughly like this inside. Knotty pine predominated here as well, now symbolizing the unpredictable fun and variety of the talent
shows, which ranged from magic acts to comedy sketches to a piano performance of Ernest Gold's theme from Exodus to a
lip-sync of Sha Na Na's remake of the Earls' "Remember Then" by Dean Buckley
and the Greasers...
...to recorder renderings by Yours Truly, which I
reprised at our St. Paul's Choir concert here. Yes,
to counterbalance the clown shows, we gave our sole concert at
Cleaves. Our repertoire reprised "Think Summer" (made famous by Roy Clark and written by Paul Evans and Paul Parnes of "Happiness Is" one-hit-wonder fame) and several sacred
numbers including Christmas carols (yes, in the summertime), due to the
more classically refined preferences of our new conductor, who "just couldn't
get into" pop music but consented to "Think Summer" as a bow to choir
tradition. (That, by the way, was renowned organist Thomas Murray, who recently retired as University Organist and Professor of Music at Yale University.)
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Teddy Bar sign, Tempe, Arizona, courtesy of Flickr |
No, we didn't tour that year. The choir's and camp's agendas often came to loggerheads, particularly when the PA proclamation "All members of St. Paul's Choir please report to Cleaves Hall" disrupted the fun-and-games I was enjoying on Aardvark Day, forcing me to give away the "point" money I'd just won in a putt-putt tourney.
But that sacrifice had its advantages: a good concert, and just compensation for that rehearsal with a timeless summer treat: chocolate-coated vanilla ice-cream "Teddy Bars" like the one on the right, only without the peanuts and fudge and with a wrapper sporting a jolly Teddy Bear image and a slogan, "One Taste Better." Which it was, save for a few choristers who couldn't stay away from Aardvark Day, thus had to "do without their ice cream," in the words of our assistant director.
But ice cream couldn't sweeten up our sour grapes about not having the private turf we had enjoyed for the past 63 years. Now it was clear that it didn't behoove us to shack up with another camp family and get lost in the
building-to-building shuffle. We needed to stake our claim to our own camp to truly flourish as a touring chorus.
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Pointe Trinity Estates, Bow Lake, Strafford, N.H. Photo courtesy of Trulia. |
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Photo courtesy of Sotheby's International Realty |
So next year, luxury was to be ours again at
The Governor's Academy in Byfield, Massachusetts. Besides, Trinity Church Camp was on the brink of closing down, too. Its site is now anchored by Pointe Trinity Estates, a luxury gated community, and last I heard, the sole remaining "Aardvark" cabin was being used for storage on one of the properties, and may be all gone by now for all I know.
At least one of Pointe Trinity's homebuilders seemed to 'remember then'...
To be continued...
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