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  1. Camp Fire, formerly Camp Fire USA and originally Camp Fire Girls of America, is a co-ed youth development organization. [1] [2] Camp Fire was the first nonsectarian, multicultural organization for girls in America. [3] It is now gender-inclusive, and its programs emphasize camping and other outdoor activities.

  2. Camp Fire is a national nonprofit that connects young people to the outdoors, to others, and to themselves through inclusive, playful, and affordable programs. Founded in 1910 as a multiracial and nonsectarian organization for girls, Camp Fire today serves all young people with diverse needs and interests.

  3. 19 de ago. de 2023 · A historical analysis of the iconic American youth organization that shaped girls' roles and identities in the twentieth century. The book explores how Camp Fire Girls balanced essential feminism, gender differences, and social change across time and contexts.

  4. Learn about the origins and evolution of Camp Fire, formerly known as Camp Fire Girls, an organization that has been a leader in youth development for over 110 years. Find out how Camp Fire welcomes all young people and offers diverse and inclusive programs across 25 states.

  5. The Camp Fire Girls applied its inclusion policy to girls with disabilities both within the mainland United States and in the territory of the Philippines. Within two years of its U.S. launch, Camp Fire Girls met in U.S. institutions for children with vision impairments, deafness, and limited mobility.

  6. The Camp Fire Girls books is a series of fiction novels written for children by various authors from 1912 into the 1930s portraying members of the Camp Fire Girls. [1] Authors. E. A. Watson Hyde. Margaret Penrose. Harriet Pyne Grove. Harriet Rietz. Hildegarde Gertrude Frey (also as Hildegard G. Frey)

  7. 30 de jun. de 2023 · Designed as a corollary to the Boy Scouts of America, the Camp Fire Girls aimed to create a program that would bridge school and home, encourage outdoor play within nature, and highlight what they saw as the distinct gendered experiences and expectations of girls to build a stronger United States.