This page was last updated on: October 20, 2011
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Juliette Gordon Low -  Hooray for Daisy!
These activities can be downloaded and printed for troop use
Daisy & Brownie Girls Scouts

1912 Girl Scout paper doll

Paper Bag puppet

Coloring page of Juliette Low, Founder

Active story about Juliette Low founding of the Girl Scouts

Visit a virtual tour of Daisy's birthplace  and where she began the Girl Scouts
in Savanah, GA
Many of the activities are in  other outside websites click here
Juniors & Teen Girl Scouts & Adults

Read the presentation given by Marian Corbin Aslakson a member of the White Rose Patrol in the very first troop formed by Juliette Low.
(download the PDF file below)


Increase their knowledge of "Miss Daisy" as they:

Learn about Daisy life during the Civil War and being sent to boarding schools and finishing schools in Virginia and New York by reading the Lady from Savannah

Learn about the influence her grandmother and great grandmother had that Daisy used to develop outdoor program and skills as she use Native American and frontier life skills stories that she had been told by reading  Wau-Bun. Written by Juliette Magill Kinzie,  the story of this early colonial family was has been published by The Colonial Dames of America.
Wau-Bun (1873) by Juliette Magill Kinzie, on line <http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12183> Lady from Savanah (1958) Gladys Denny Shultz, as well as Juliette Low, Founder,  Juliette Low and the Girl Scouts, Girl Scouts Daisy and the Girl Scouts (2000) by Fern Brown .
Marian_Corbin_Aslakson.pdf
Marian_Corbin_Aslakson.pdf
In 1857 Daisy Low's father , W. W. Gordon married Eleanor (Nelly) Lytle Kinzie (1835-1917) of Chicago, daughter of John Harris and Juliette Augusta Magill Kinzie (1806-1870).  Juliette (Daisy's grand mother)  was the author of The Chicago Massacre, first published in 1844 and later incorporated into her Wau-Bun (1856), which Nelly edited and published again in 1901 and 1912. Nelly also edited The Chicago Massacre for republication in 1912 as The Fort Dearborn Massacre. Nelly wrote Rosemary and Rue (1907) in memory of her daughter Alice and John Kinzie, the "Father of Chicago" (1910).
Daisy was always jumping into new games, hobbies and ideas. Another one of her nicknames was "Little Ship". She acquired this nickname while living with her maternal grandparents in Chicago during the Civil War. Her grandfather, John Kinzie, was an Indian agent and young Juliette often played with Indian children. Juliette loved to hear the story about her great-grandmother, Eleanor Lytle Kinzie, who was captured by Indians. Even though she was a captive, she was always joyful, so the Indians started calling her "Little-Ship-Under-Full-Sail".

Teen Scouts and adults alike will be facinated by the story in
Little Ship Under Full Sail by Janie Lynn Panagopoulos
Click here for a skit that girls can perform. Little Ship Under Full Sail


Juliette A. Magill Kinzie