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Old
Camp Livingston

From 1919
until 1968 Camp Livingston for children ages 6-16 flourished in Indian
Hill on north Given Road, at the site of current day village soccer fields
and Livingston Lodge.
The vital role of the camp on the banks of the Little Miami River
and its summer joys are recalled by former campers and counselors.
Originally
named the Helen Trounstine Camp, its name was changed in 1920, when H. S.,
Livingston established a memorial for his only son, Lt. Robert Krohn
Livingston, who died during the influenza epidemic of World War I.
Livingston's father sought to establish a summer camp where
children could experience growth and maturation in a trusting, caring
environment.
He equipped the site with barracks style buildings and funded the
conversion of the land to athletic fields.
Before the
camp moved to Indiana, more than 15,000 campers came "from the
crowded West End...to enjoy a few days vacation and taste of life in the
open...with pure air and wide open spaces."
For the first 20 years the boys and girls had separate sessions,
but in the 1940's the camp became co-educational.
Program choices included most sports, drama, canoeing, handicrafts,
nature study, and photography.
The camp grew to 25 acres, and a swimming pool was constructed for
the required swimming lessons.
There were also tennis courts, ball fields, and two campfire areas.
Camp group
projects included building a duck pond, a chicken coop, and a primitive
outdoor chapel of tree stumps.
There was more emphasis on learning to work together than on
competition; and daily inspections, flag ceremonies, and songfests were
part of the program, along with skit night, amateur nights, and an
occasional overnight primitive camping trip to Camp Friedlander.
Though
Camp Livingston was predominantly Jewish, children of other faiths
attended.
Most were from Cincinnati, but some came from Michigan, Tennessee,
West Virginia, and Kentucky.
There was no religious curriculum, although informal services were
held on the Sabbath, and Kosher style food was served in the Mess Hall.
Scholarships were available to the needy to cover the 1940's cost
of $7 per week.
Livingston
Lodge was the Rec Hall, and the Elliott House was the Director's
residence.
Four cabins for girls ("The Alps") were up on the hill,
and the three boys' bunkhouses were across Given Road near a pathway to
the river.
In the Mess Hall behind the Director's house a favorite item on the
menu was corn fritters made by the caretaker's wife (Mrs. Brooks.)
Other buildings included a small barn for the horses, a hobby
house, and a canteen where campers could buy candy or postcards.
Camp Livingston's facilities were rustic, but former
campers remember Livingston as having a "special magnetic
field." Many fondly
recall its location amid Indian Hill's greenery along the banks of the
Little Miami as an oasis or a "Garden of Eden."
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