Including: Black Hawk, Grundy, Butler, Franklin, Wright, Hancock, Winnebago, Worth, Cerro Gordo, Mitchell, Floyd, Bremer, Chickasaw, Howard, Winneshiek, Fayette, and Buchanan.
The Winnebago Scout Reservation had several heated and unheated sleeping cabins that were available year-round, themed campsites with permanent picnic shelters, and many other facilities including: a large dining hall and kitchen, director's lodge building, activity building, heated swimming Pool, shower facilities, BB gun range, archery range, obstacle course, nature building, hiking/biking/skiing trails, mountain bikes, cross country skis and snowshoes.
[4] Campsites were given different themes including Native American teepees, covered wagons, mountain man cabins, a Gold Rush town, a fort, and a Hobbit village.
In 1954 the Winnebago Boy Scout council decided to close down Camp Roosevelt due mainly to its small size.
In 1956 the Council Executive Board met in Marble Rock, IA and voted to establish a new Scout Reservation in the area.
[5] Due to decreased attendance and budgetary difficulties, the Winnebago Scout Reservation was sold to the Floyd County Conservation Board in 2012 and repurposed into the Tosanak Recreation Area.
[6] The Order of the Arrow Scouting's national honor society is represented in the Winnebago Council by the Sac-N-Fox Lodge.
The Sac-N-Fox Lodge flap was designed by Gary Stattler, The fleur-de-lis symbolizes ties to the Boy Scouts of America and the W.W.W.