Next up, Girl Scout history from the 1980s. Five Great Moments from Girl Scout history in the 1980s. How many do you remember?

Daisy Program Introduced

Young girl in blue smock
GSD 1 sketch

Starting in 1984, kindergarten-age girls could become Daisy Girl Scouts. Daisies wore simple blue smocks. They did not sell cookies and did not have earned recognitions. Daisy petals were introduced in 2002, petals in 2011.

Brownie Try-Its Introduced

Before 1986, the only recognitions for Brownies were patches for well-rounded troop years. Fifteen Try-Its were offered the first year, with more to follow. The triangle-shaped Try-Its were designed to be non-competitive and encouraged trying new things. Girls had to complete four of six requirements to earn the recognition.

Chart of Original Brownie Try Its
Original Try Its

Cookie Sales Turn 50

In 1984 Little Brownie Bakers marked the 50th anniversary of commercial cookie sales with a new cookie: Medallions.

Special Girl Scout cookie 50 years
50th Anniversary Cookie, 1984

Thirty-three years later, in 2017, Girl Scouts celebrated 100 years of cookie sales.

White circle patch says Cookie Troop 100
100th Anniversary, 2017

50 + 33 = 83?

Maybe the Math Whiz badge needs to return.

Teen Uniforms Take Preppy Turn

Girl Scout Cadette and Senior uniforms from the 1980s
Cadette/Senior Uniform, 1980s

New uniforms for Cadettes and Seniors (no Ambassadors until 2008) were introduced in 1980. For the first time, both levels shared the same skirt, pants, vest, and sash. They were distinguished by plaid blouses. The Cadette plaid was predominantly green, the Seniors blue. Catalogs described the green pieces as “apple green,” but it was more like Girl Scout guacamole.

I Earned the Gold Award

Robertson Gold Award certificate
Robertson Gold

The Gold Award was introduced in 1980 as the highest award available to Girl Scouts. I volunteered at my local council office, and they handed me the guidelines. Staff said, “We know you’re going to earn it. We’re also going to send every question about the process to you.”

I earned my Gold Award in 1983. Today, I am still mentoring future golden girls as a member of my council’s Gold Award Panel.

History by Decade 1980s
History by Decade 1980s

4 responses to “Girl Scouts Look Back 110 Years: 1980s”

  1. This was my era too, and I earned Gold in 1989. Thanks for pointing out the discrepancy in the cookie year patches. I have a 50 Yrs of Cookies patch from when I was a girl on my patch blanket and was very confused when the 100 Yrs of Cookies patch came out a few years ago. I wondered if volunteering for GS had really aged me that much.

    And those Cadette unis were HEINOUS! We HATED wearing them. We couldn’t wait to move up to Seniors with its blue colors.

  2. […] taking a look back at past decades of Girl Scouting on her GS History blog. Recently, she published one for the 1980s, which brought me back to my childhood and the era of when I was a Girl Scout growing […]

  3. About the cookie years discrepancy: there isn’t a discrepancy in the numbers. The earlier patch marked 50 years of commercial production (1935-1984, inclusive). From 1917 to 1934, Scouts made their own cookies. The second patch marked 100 years of cookie sales (1917-2017). There is text indicating what is being celebrated on both the LBB ad and the 2017 patch.
    The only mathematic error is on the 2017 patch: the first sales were held in 1917, so the 100th year was 2016.

  4. Actually the 2017 acknowledgement is correct – but so is your statement (partially). While 2016 was the 100th year, it was not the centennial celebration because the first year starts as 0 in the anniversary count. Simple math tells us 1917 plus 100 years is 2017. The breakdown is this:
    Year 1 = 1917 = Anniversary 0
    Year 2 = 1918 = Anniversary 1
    ~
    Year 99 = 2015 = Anniversary 98
    Year 100 = 2016 = Anniversary 99
    Year 101 = 2017 = Anniversary 100

    signed, an 80s GS

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