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The Boy Scouts inspired Norman Rockwell. His work will now help pay back abuse survivors
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The Boy Scouts inspired Norman Rockwell. His work will now help pay back abuse survivors

DALLAS (AP) — In a Norman Rockwell painting, a family proudly welcomes a beaming Boy Scout home from camp, bag in hand. In another of Rockwell’s painfully idyllic works, a Cub Scout sits on a chair to measure the chest of his older brother, a Boy Scout who has taped his fitness sheet to his bedroom wall.

Many of the works in the Boy Scouts of America collection are as intertwined in American life as the organization itself, being featured on magazine covers, calendars and even used to sell war bonds. Next week, the works will begin to be auctioned off to help pay compensation owed to tens of thousands of people, mainly men, who were sexually abused while scouting.

The collection of more than 300 works, including dozens by Rockwell, is estimated to be worth nearly $60 million, a pittance compared to the organization’s multibillion-dollar bankruptcy plan. Campgrounds and other Scout property were also sold to help pay survivors.

“The idea that an iconic art collection that the Boy Scouts have amassed over many years is being liquidated to pay for the recovery of the survivors and to bring them some measure of justice I think is very significant,” said Barbara Houser, a retired bankruptcy judge who oversees the survivor settlement trust.

This year, the 114-year-old organization based in suburban Dallas announced it is rebranding to Scouting Americaa change meant to signal the organization’s commitment to inclusion. The group now say hello to the girlsas well as gay youth and leaders.

Compensation for survivors

Hoping to survive a wave of sexual abuse claims, the Boy Scouts filed for bankruptcy in 2020. The 2.4 billion dollars bankruptcy planamong the nation’s largest and most complex, it allowed the organization to continue operating while compensating survivors. It went in force last year.

Houser said more than 82,000 people filed during the bankruptcy process, and of those, more than 64,000 filled out a detailed questionnaire to state their claims. Survivors will be paid according to the severity of the abuse they suffered.

“Many of these survivors have waited decades, literally, for there to be some recognition of what happened to them,” Houser said.

There could be more distributions of funds to survivors as money becomes available and more litigation plays out, and how much each survivor gets will depend on how much money the trust collects, Houser said.

So far, nearly 6,000 survivors have chosen to receive one-time payments of $3,500, and various settlements are being established for other survivors, with some payments beginning for them.

In addition to selling art, contributors to the trust include insurers and local Boy Scout councils. By October, more than 30 council properties had been sold, Scouting America said.

The survivors

Tom Krumins had only started having conversations with family and friends about the abuse as a middle school student at a camp in South Carolina when the bankruptcy was filed. It took them months to decide whether to join the settlement.

“It’s the kind of courage and bravery that an Eagle Scout should show, but at the same time, it feels like you’re tearing a part of yourself away or losing yourself along the way,” Krumins said.

His focus was the Boy Scouts’ commitments to youth protection, which survivors insisted be reinforced before voting in favor of the bankruptcy plan. The money will help, but the most important thing is to “make sure this doesn’t happen again,” he said.

Doug Kennedy, a survivor and co-chairman of a the victim representation committee in the bankruptcy case, said more than three-quarters of claimants approved the plan, but watching the process unfold in the courts was “agonizing” for survivors.

“The reality is for most survivors, all that solves is bankruptcy, it doesn’t solve their pain and it doesn’t solve what was taken from them,” he said.

Work of art

The collection will be sold by Dallas-based Heritage Auctions in the coming years, including more than two dozen works that will go en masse on Friday.

The collection includes nearly 60 works by Rockwell, who worked for the organization’s magazine, Boys’ Life, early in his career and maintained a relationship with the Scouts for more than half a century, including creating images for their calendars.

A work by JC Leyendecker depicting a Scout signaling with flags was painted in 1911, a year after the organization was founded. It appeared on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post and was reproduced many times in research materials. His 1918 painting of a scout holding a sword in front of a representation of Lady Liberty draped in a flag and wielding a shield was adapted as a poster to sell World War I bonds.

“A lot of artists really got involved in kind of cementing the culture and the vision of the Boy Scouts,” said Aviva Lehmann, Heritage’s senior vice president for American art.

For the past four years, the works have been on display at the Ohio Medici Museum. Before that, some were on display at the National Scout Museum.