Lincoln Heritage Council

Audubon originally served youth within a jagged border formed by the Ohio, Rough, Tennessee, and Barren Rivers.

In the early 1990s, Audubon merged with the Paducah based Four Rivers Council, adding the additional counties on the other side of the Tennessee River as well as counties in southern Illinois and northwestern Tennessee with the exception of the Fort Campbell military reservation in southern Trigg and Christian counties, which remained a part of the Middle Tennessee Council.

(* - The parts of Christian and Trigg counties that are contained within Fort Campbell, KY (US Army base) are served by the Middle Tennessee Council.)

It offers the following program areas in which Scouts can advance: Range and Target Activities, Ecology, STEM, Handicraft, Aquatics and Outdoor Skills.

Elements for older Scouts include COPE course, climbing tower, and ATV program.

It includes the John Work House and Mill Site, a Registered Historic Place.

Tunnel Mill held summer camps as early as 1917 and yearly under the direction of the George Rogers Clark Council (after it was formed) from 1928 - 1992.

[1] Pfeffer Scout Reservation (PSR) is located on the shores of Kentucky Lake near Aurora.

The Land Between the Lakes National Outdoor Adventure Center was a cooperative effort between Scouting America and the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA).

Scouting America officially abandoned the National base but permitted the Four Rivers Council to continue to offer high adventure-related facilities for sailing, canoeing, kayaking and U.S. Coast Guard approved Sailing training.

While participating at summer camp, Scouts take part in traditional flag raising and lowering ceremonies.

The camp has sixteen campsites located on over four hundred acres of land and six miles of shoreline.

Camp Wildcat Hollow and the Badget Reservation was unsuccessfully offered for sale to a local government for use as a public park.

Tseyedin means cliff dweller as represented on the original round patches.

A precursor to the lodge, called the White Feather Society, was founded at Camp Pakentuck (a combination name of Paducah and Kentucky) in southern Illinois in 1951.

The Society issued a red ribbon with a white feather silk screened on it.

After his election, White Feather Lodge created the first patch to honor a National Chief.