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  1. William Dickson Boyce (June 16, 1858 – June 11, 1929) was an American newspaper man, entrepreneur, magazine publisher, and explorer. He was the founder of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) and the short-lived Lone Scouts of America (LSA). [ 1] Born in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, he acquired a love for the outdoors early in his life.

  2. William Dickson Boyce In late October of 1909, a Chicago publisher who resided in Ottawa, Illinois, was on a business trip in London, England. Standing on a corner in a dense fog, utterly lost, he was approached by a young boy who inquired, “Sir, may I be of assistance.”.

  3. W. D. Boyce. William D. Boyce was an American businessman and millionaire who owned numerous newspapers in the United States and Canada as well as a publishing company. In the early 1900s, he started to focus more on philanthropic projects than on business matters.

  4. It's the story of the Unknown Scout who guided Chicago publisher William D. Boyce through a pea-soup fog in 1909 in London—and that led him to the office of Robert S.S. Baden-Powell, the founder of Scouting.

  5. Oct 5, 2022 · William D. Boyce was a school teacher, outdoorsman, lumberjack, coal miner and an enterprising publisher. But he is best known as a founder of the Boy Scouts of America. William Dickson...

  6. Feb 8, 2018 · Tale of the Unknown Scout. Feb 8. Scouting was brought to America by William D. Boyce, a Chicago publisher, and the way Boyce discovered Scouting is one of the movement’s most colorful stories.

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  8. Much like Baden-Powell, Seton and Beard, William D. Boyce, a wealthy Chicago newspaper publisher, came to boys’ work by accident. In August 1909, he was in London, preparing for an African safari, when he got lost in a pea-soup fog — or perhaps simply turned around (accounts differ).

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