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Staff Update

2008 National Rendezvous
Complete 2008 Rendezvous Information


Memories of the first FCF Rendezvous

It was 1969 when the first National Training Camp was held in Marshfield, Missouri, at Camp Arrowhead.

I went there as a trainee, and that's when I met Johnnie Barnes. I completed the course, and in 1970 I was surprised to have an invitation to serve on the staff in Marshfield. Then I really got to know Commander Barnes.

To my surprise, in 1971, I was once again invited to serve on the staff. That Saturday evening, when the trainees were on the overnighter, the whole staff was sitting around talking about the Rendezvous that was coming up. The first national event would take place in Springfield, Missouri, at Fantastic Caverns. But as we were talking, Johnnie mentioned that the guys who were supposed to bring the wild game for the one meal they were going to fix, failed to come up with it.

So I said: "Why don't you butcher a goat and call it Kansas antelope and butcher a hog and call it Arkansas razorback. That will provide the amount of food we need." So Johnnie said, "That's a great idea! Why don't you provide that for us?" I told him I would, but I wasn't going to cook it.

Next, they asked if I would be in FCF since I wasn't. As a result I went to a Southern Missouri Royal Rangers event and was initiated into the Daniel Boone Chapter of FCF. Then I began to prepare for the 1972 Rendezvous. I had been a member of the Osage Muzzle Loading Club for quite some time before I became a member of FCF. Johnnie had asked me if I would conduct the shoot for the Rendezvous.

Well, I'll never forget as we began to gather for the first ever Rendezvous at Fantastic Caverns. There were very few men who had muzzle loaders. I doubt if there were two dozen in the whole group. The number of members who were there was probably less than 200. So, nobody really knew a whole lot about how to conduct a Rendezvous, but we did the best we could.

We started out with our noon meal, and everybody seemed to enjoy the Kansas antelope and the Arkansas razorback. I think that somebody there smoked some salmon, but everybody seemed to enjoy the meal, and we began to get into our activities. We had activities like horn-blowin' and pole climin', and we did have a hawk and a knife throw and a muzzle loading shoot. I recall Don Wray and myself loading and reloading our muzzle loaders for quite some time and allowing everybody to try at least one shot.

I remember that the winner of the first muzzle loading shoot ever held in FCF was Jerry Haines of Kansas City. And the winner of the costume was Henry Adolph of New York. It seemed like everything went real good. We had good council fire services, and everybody seemed to enjoy himself. That day, some of the guys had curtain fringe sewed onto their shirtsleeves to make them look like buckskin. Some wore rabbit skin caps with coontails sewed on the back.

I was thinking back to the '72 Rendezvous and to where we are now 'bout to enter the new millennium at the year 2000 Rendezvous in July. What a difference those few years have made! The men now are authentic with their dress. Most have buckskins, colonial costumes, or military-type costumes from Plymouth Rock to pre-Civil War.

We had a good group of muzzle loaders that shot and everybody, just about, entered into the hawk-and-knife throw and the flint steel. The men and boys have become so colorful in their costuming and have sharpened their skills as frontiersmen. I'm so pleased that we've seen the progress that we have.

It's not only the fun and foofaraw of FCF, but we have a Trappers Brigade now that we use as a benevolent service to help people out in our own country. We also have a Pathfinder organization that travels all over the world to build churches in foreign countries where there are scarcely any facilities such as water, electricity, motels, restaurants, and that sort of thing.

But FCF has really come a long way. I was just thinking about the '96 Rendezvous, when the evening services were so great. Men and boys alike were slain in the Holy Spirit, men's lives were changed, they were given new challenges, and young men were called into the ministry. Some had a new, fresh experience that has encouraged them to continue on to work in the Royal Rangers ministry, reaching boys for Christ.

I said all that to say I believe the FCF is second to none as far as color, excitement, and adventure are involved. But I really believe the thing that makes FCF so great is not our costumes or our muzzle loading or our other activities. It's God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, as men with hungry hearts and boys with hearts that love Jesus Christ come together every 4 years.

It's like a real Rendezvous, I'm sure, that they had back in the days of Jim Bridger and Jedediah Smith. I know that they were all happy to see one another like I am. We see people we haven't seen in a long time, and we see the young boys that have grown up to be men. What a thrill it is to see the fruits of your labor. I know FCF is going to continue to grow and become a real spearhead of frontline troops to help reach boys for Jesus Christ. FCF will set an example and project the Christian male image in the boys as well as the men.

Well, see ya,
Fred ("Old Hawkeye") Deaver