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About Tamarack > Our History

The Fresh Air Society was created as a committee of the United Jewish
Charities by Miss Blanche Hart and Miss Ida Koppel. Miss Hart and Miss
Koppel saw the need to provide recreational activities in the out-of-doors
to immigrant women and children. To fulfill this dream, they began taking
groups of mothers and children to Belle Isle. Carrying baskets piled high
with food, they climbed aboard a chartered trolley for a day in the "fresh
air."
After visiting Camp Wise in Cleveland, Ohio, Miss Blanche Hart was convinced
of the need to create a real resident camp experience. In 1904, an old
house in Kingston, Ontario, was rented for $50.00. This camp opened for
two weeks to a group of 25 women and children. Unfortunately, the water
supply ran out and put an end to their experiment.
The women were undaunted by such problems, and even more convinced of
finding a resident site. In 1908, another house was purchased in Roseville,
Michigan. This house accommodated 50 guests. The guests cooked, did house
work, and took care of the grounds and boats. The counselors of the time
were called "chaperones."
A more permanent setting for the camp was found at Venice Beach on Lake
St. Clair, about four miles away from Mt.Clemens. Miss Blanche Hart was
able to raise $10,000.00 to purchase this site. After its renovation,
this new Fresh Air Camp at Venice Beach accommodated 200 participants
and opened in 1912. Due to the increasing number of children who needed
to be served, the spaces set aside for mothers were eventually eliminated.
Under the leadership of Miss Hart, Mrs. Edith Heavenrich, Mrs. Henry Wineman,
and many others, the Fresh Air Camp served thousands of children between
the years 1912-1925. By the early twenties, however, the routing of highways
past the camp entrance and the pollution of the lake made it necessary
to look for a new site.
In
1925, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Rosenthal donated 80 acres of land near Brighton
that was to become the nucleus of the new campsite. Further purchases
brought the camp up to 200 acres that consisted of the familiar dormitory
buildings, recreation hall, and dining hall.
In 1927, the year that Fresh Air Camp at Brighton opened, the Fresh Air
Society became one of the incorporating member agencies of the Jewish
Welfare Federation.
In 1929, a radical change occurred when the Fresh Air Society decided,
"gentlemen should be included on the board in addition to the ladies."
The first male member of the board was Samuel Gilbert.
The Depression changed the financial structure of camp. Those children
whose parents could not pay the full fee were still accepted, and full-fee
applicants were registered only in numbers sufficient to balance the budget.
This practice continues today.
Carol Eppstein was camp director until 1936, when Irwin Shaw, who ran
camp for many years, succeeded her.
In 1939, the Jewish Welfare Federation bought additional land around
Blaine Lake, where a senior unit for boys was built across the lake-Senior
Side.
Things were going well, but wartime was coming.
Restrictions during World War II challenged the camp administration,
with food, gas and tire rationing and a shortage of medical personnel,
as well as a younger, inexperienced staff. Every serviceman's child who
wanted to come to camp was given the opportunity. In addition, Irwin Shaw
had to leave camp and serve in the U.S. Navy.
After the War, Detroit's population expanded and even larger camping
facilities became an urgent need.

In 1950, to meet the increased number of children who needed to be served,
a second campsite was purchased in Ortonville, Michigan. It was to be
called Camp Tamarack, after Tamarack Hills Farms, which occupied 1250
acres. One architect who submitted drawings for the new site was the famous
Frank Lloyd Wright. His designs, however, were rejected.
This
was a time of growth at Camp Tamarack. Deroy, Fishman, Sheruth, Berman,
Levison, and Specialty Villages were constructed and opened during the
'50's and '60's. Campers would live in different villages according to
age and gender. These villages are still being used today.
In 1959, Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Levy donated Camp Kennedy, the former
hunting lodge of Governor Green, located in the Upper Peninsula. The Charles
N. Agree Outpost Camp, located in Wawa, Ontario, was a gift of the Agree
family in 1965.
In 1970, the Butzel Conference Center was built in Ortonville, to serve
senior adults. Today, Butzel is still used for Bubbie-Zaydie Camps,
Family Camps, celebrations, and corporate events.
Teen
travel trips originated in 1960. Two trips, one headed west, the other
east, provided travel and outdoor camping experiences for older teenagers.
Not only is the Western Trip still being used today, but this year, in
celebration of our 100th anniversary, the camp will run its first Eastern
Trip in over a decade.
Camp Tamarack continued to grow during the '80's and '90's. In 1981,
the Ortonville site was renamed Camp Maas, in honor of Benard L. and Rosalyn
J. Maas.
In 1982, the extremely popular Alaskan Adventure Trip was added.
The summer of 1993 marked an end of an era, as Camp Maas at Brighton
was closed, due to the infringing development. The consolidation into one
program provides many challenges and opportunities, not only for the staff,
but for the campers as well. Tamarack Camps serves approximately 1,200 campers
each summer. Now, proud to be one of the largest camps in North America, the Fresh
Air Society provides some of the best possible programs and facilities to all campers.
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