"SHSI Certificate of Recognition"
"Best on the Web"


Encyclopedia Dubuque

www.encyclopediadubuque.org

"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
Marshall Cohen—researcher and producer, CNN

Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




CAMP LITTLE CLOUD

From Encyclopedia Dubuque
Revision as of 17:49, 7 July 2025 by Randylyon (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

CAMP LITTLE CLOUD. Day camp at EAGLE POINT PARK or overnight outings at Boy Scout Camps provided the outdoor experiences for girls in the 1930s and 1940s. archerty A donation of 110 acres near Lattnerville, west of Dubuque, by the WAHLERT FOUNDATION in 1949 changed everything. Girls now had an opportunity to have their own outdoor education site.

Site development required financing which was begun with a "Path O' Pennies" campaign. To build a dam for an artificial lake and necessary buildings a total of $35,000 was needed. The city's sixth eight Brownie and Girl Scout troops began bake sales as well as sales of greeting cards and kitchen accessories. The first summer witnessed the drilling of a well, construction of an entrance road, and the clearance of land for a parking lot. Future plans called to the construction of a kitchen and dining hall, staff room, tent platforms, infirmary, showers, caretaker's cabin, and a recreational waterfront. (1) It was announced in 1952 that the sale of girl scout cookies would be earmarked for the construction of a shower house. (2)

With work continued during the winter, registration for the 1950 camping season opened on May 27th in the scout office in the LINCOLN BUILDING. The camp opened for the third week in July with registrations of 46 girls from Dubuque, McGregor, and Garnavillo, Iowa. Activity sessions included puppet making and archery.

The formal dedication ceremonies and an open house were held on July 29, 1950. The site received its name--Camp Little Cloud--on July 29th. The camp is the translation of La Petite Nuit, the name given to Julien DUBUQUE by the local SAUK AND FOX tribe. (3)

Camp activities were planned with a campfire program for parents and visitors on Friday. (4) As early as 1951 the camping schedule was expanded to six sessions for the summer with two sessions of two weeks each and four sessions with a single week. Fees were $16.50 for a single week and $32.00 for two weeks. (5)

Camp Little Cloud has served the Dubuque community for years. Beyond its association with the GIRL SCOUTS, the site served the DUBUQUE COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT for years in the 1970s with bus loads of students, generally in the fourth grade, traveling to the area by school bus for a day-long outdoor education experience. In addition to learning how to maneuver a canoe on the lake, nature crafts, and making molds of animal tracks, students were driven to the tiny cemetery near Lattnerville for the study of grave stones and the historical evidence they held. (6)

---

Source:

1. Day, Mike, "Camp Little Cloud," Telegraph Herald, June 29, 2025, p. 1C

2. "Sally Scout Says..." Telegraph Herald, April 10, 1952, p. 18

3. Day

4. "Campfire Activities Will End Week at Little Cloud," Telegraph Herald, July 20, 1951, p. 12

5. "Little Cloud Schedule Set," Telegraph Herald, November 30, 1951, p. 4

6. Lyon, Randy, fourth grade teacher at HOOVER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL