HomeNewsCherry Hill News'Something permanent': Teen builds homestead benches for Eagle Scout project

‘Something permanent’: Teen builds homestead benches for Eagle Scout project

When rising senior at Cherry Hill West Gage Angelucci set out to work on his Eagle Scout project a year ago, he was sure of only one thing: He wanted to build something.

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Emily Liu/The Sun
The benches have been enhanced by two pots of flowers donated by the Cherry Hill Garden Club.

“Gage comes to me and says, ‘I want to do my Eagle Scout project there,'” Wysocki recalled. “I said, ‘What are you thinking?’ And he said benches. You should have seen me carrying on! I was so happy!

“We were hoping to have one bench in here,” she added. “He builds two and gives one (more) to the back porch. It was just perfect.”

Angelucci had to learn CAD (computer aided design) to fashion the benches, create the plans, submit them, get approval from the township for digging and oversee construction.

“I had to make my plans as clean as possible,” Angelucci noted. “My dad taught me a little bit of CAD and watched me as I was drawing out the benches.”

The Scout said leadership and planning were the most valuable parts of the experience.

“Being in charge of the project and making sure it got done the way I wanted to get it done, and being able to operate off the Scouts working on the project and also the planning,” recounted Angelucci, who hopes to become an aerospace engineer.

“The process of going through, ‘This is what I want and this is how I’m going to get it done.'”

Angelucci has been a Boy Scout for close to a decade and is now in the townshi’s Troop 70. He began as a Cub Scout when he was about 6 years old and celebrated his 18th birthday recently.

“I stayed because it was fun,” he remarked of Scouting. “When I joined Scouts, Eagle Scout wasn’t even on my radar. I was just having fun and working on different requirements (to earn badges). When I was 16 or 17 (is) when I realized I was kind of close to Eagle Scout.

“I’ve worked my way up just by being in Scouts,” he added, “taking on different leadership roles and doing what I need to do. I kind of got close enough to Eagle Scout to say, ‘I can grind this out and get this out of the way.'”

But the work required to be an Eagle isn’t easy.

“Only about 6% of Boy Scouts nationwide make Eagle (Scout ranking),” said Ron Lewis, Scoutmaster for Troop 70.

Other skills Angelucci has learned throughout the years include how to tie knots and lashes, to give first aid and make fires. He has also learned leadership.

“I love helping make the troop run well,” he offered, “making it run smoothly, making it be the best troop it can be.”

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