The rock that was the inspiration for the name of Solid Rock Bible Camp. |
ROCK
SOLID
JUNE 2009
Bert Schultz is not easily deterred.
In late winter 45 years ago, Schultz was working alone at
Solid Rock Bible Camp, cutting rafters for a building that would
eventually contain a crafts shop, when a friend stopped by. Noting the Skil saw, the friend asked Schultz if he’d ever sawed through his own electrical cord. Then, after assuring the friend that he’d never do anything so dumb, he promptly did exactly that during his first cut after the friend’s departure.
eventually contain a crafts shop, when a friend stopped by. Noting the Skil saw, the friend asked Schultz if he’d ever sawed through his own electrical cord. Then, after assuring the friend that he’d never do anything so dumb, he promptly did exactly that during his first cut after the friend’s departure.
Irritated, he leaned against one of his sawhorses and began
to braid the wires back together in preparation for wrapping the damaged cord
in electrical tape. As he worked, the sawhorse suddenly bucked, the ground
started to roll violently, and the building began to shake.
Schultz tried to maintain his balance as all around him the
world trembled. Windows in a nearby building shattered, and the ice on Miracle
Lake cracked as black mud churned around its edges. The camp bus, without front
tires and up on blocks for repairs, sank to its wheel housings as the blocks
flew outward, and at Memorial Lodge the concrete-block chimney crashed to the
ground.
Memorial Lodge in the early days. |
When the shaking finally subsided, Schultz ran to his home
to check on his family. The Good Friday dinner of sauerkraut, mashed potatoes
and moose meat was ruined and dishes were broken, but his wife, Donna, and
their son, Scott, were all right. As night settled in, they attempted to assess
the damage to the camp and to use their radio to learn the extent of what had
just happened.
They discovered that there had never been a Good Friday like
this one in the history of Alaska, and that March 27, 1964, would be remembered
as the day of the Great Alaska Earthquake.
But awesome power of nature did not dissuade the Schultzes. A
new stone chimney eventually replaced the shattered concrete blocks, and other
repairs to the camp were made as well. Under their guidance, and with plenty of
help, Solid Rock Bible Camp overcame this setback and continued to grow and
prosper. This year the camp will celebrate its 51st year of existence.
The 194-acre camp, which now is run by Ted and Valerie
McKenney and features dozens of activities for youths from the Kenai Peninsula
and beyond, got its official start in the summer of 1958—and was a much more
raw and unpolished affair in those days. In their camp memoir, Miracle at Solid Rock, the Schultzes
recall those initial sessions of camp and the years of preparation that allowed
it all to happen.
In fact, even before the Schultzes arrived in Alaska, the
groundwork for the camp was being laid.
Around the peninsula in 1952, several missionary-based
Protestant churches joined together to form the Kenai Peninsula Fellowship and
unite under this common goal: “To know the Lord Jesus Christ and make Him
known.”
Bert and Donna Schultz penned the story of Solid Rock. |
Committee members traveled to Anchorage to review BLM maps
and selected several potential sites. At one site, located at Mile 90.5 of the
Sterling Highway, committee members snowshoed into the property, and there found
a rock about three stories high, swathed in moss and spiked with young trees. They
climbed the rock and looked around at the mixed deciduous-coniferous forest and
the half-mile-long lake nearby, and decided they had found their camp site.
KPF petitioned BLM for all of the land surrounding the lake—about
200 acres. BLM countered with an offer of 100 acres for $1,300, and the
committee accepted. Financial times were lean, however, and the sale price was
too steep, so in July 1956 KPF settled on only 70 acres for a price of $945.27.
The following year, the Schultzes entered the peninsula
picture.
Bert Schultz and Donna Porte had both grown up in Altoona,
Pennsylvania. Bert, now 77, was the son of butcher/grocer/antiques dealer,
while Donna, now 76, was the daughter of a baker who later worked for the
Pennsylvania Railroad. Bert was raised in the Methodist church, while Donna
grew up as a Baptist, but both of them came to their faith when they were very
young, and both were inspired as teen-agers to consider missionary work in
Alaska.
When they met, their inspirations and their passions intertwined.
They became engaged in 1952, married in 1953, and headed to Alaska for their
first northern missionary experience in 1957. After a four-month building
project at Old Harbor on Kodiak Island, they moved to Sterling to pastor the Baptist
church there, and made their first connections to the Kenai Peninsula
Fellowship.
In 1958, the fellowship became determined to hold its first
camp on the property that was becoming known as Solid Rock for its prominent
landmark. In order for camp to occur, however, infrastructure was needed—a road
into the property, housing for the campers, and a staff to run the operation.
Bert Schultz and Paul Weimer walked in from the highway and
staked out a road route that was later opened up by Jesse Robinson and his D-7
Cat. Robinson also cleared the trees and moss from the site that would
eventually hold Memorial Lodge, the first permanent structure on the property.
This clearing, on exposed clay soil, became the site of the first camp that
summer.
The clearing also became the source of considerable
aggravation during rainy days, when the clay churned into a gooey mess and
inspired a few early campers to dub the area “Solid Mud Bible Camp.”
The Schultzes, along with Floyd and Virginia McElveen, Lloyd
and Ruth Dean, Ray and Irene Mainwaring, and others, worked hard to prepare for
the first camp. They used unpeeled spruce logs to construct the framework for a
camp shelter, which they topped with tarpaulins and sided with Visqueen. Under
the shelter, they scattered sawdust for a floor and built tables, benches and a
serving counter.
They also built a 10-foot dock on the lake for the camp’s
single rowboat, hung a stout rope from an overhanging birch tree, erected
primitive outhouses, and built a fire pit to heat the 55-gallon drum that
supplied hot water for camper clean-up and washing dishes.
When the first five-day session began, 34 junior high and
high school campers showed up, prepared to sleep in tents and under tarps, to
participate in Bible lessons and a half-dozen outdoor and under-tarp activities
(volleyball, swimming, hiking, boating, arts and crafts, singing), and to help
with the basic necessities that would allow the camp to function.
Each camper brought silverware, a bowl, a plate, and a cup;
a box of cereal and a box of Jell-O or pudding mix; a
sleeping bag or a bedroll
(with moss used as a mattress). Some campers brought extra food—sugar, flour,
eggs, bacon—while other KPF members and camper families provided Alaska-grown
potatoes, carrots, lettuce, radishes, and rhubarb, plus moose and caribou meat,
fresh salmon and wild cranberries, and dozens of cookies and pies for dessert.
Water-skiing is one of the many popular activities at Solid Rock Bible Camp. |
Lloyd Dean acted as camp director, with Ruth Dean as camp
nurse, and Irene Mainwaring, with her Betty Crocker recipe book, as camp cook.
Bert Schultz said that 17 of those original 34 campers “prayed to receive
Christ as Savior” during that first session, and that everyone had a great time
despite the mostly rainy weather.
However, if Week One was damp, Week Two was soaking. The
second camp session, for children from second to sixth grade, was held in a
series of downpours, which produced mud three inches deep on the volleyball
court, flooded tents, saturated sleeping bags, and created sopping clothes on
wet and homesick kids.
Floyd McElveen recalled, “We did our best to quiet them,
take care of them, talk to them about Jesus, and keep them from dying of
pneumonia.” After only three days, organizers cancelled the remainder of the
session. The quarter-mile road up to the highway had deteriorated so badly that
they had to trudge up the hill repeatedly with all the kids and their gear to
waiting parents.
But, said Donna Schultz, that soggy genesis and rainy exodus
“didn’t dampen our spirits.”
Over the next 50 years, Solid Rock Ministries, Inc., would add
more than 120 acres, including parts of two small lakes, to its camp property;
would construct more than two dozen buildings, including snug cabins for all
the campers; would streamline its services to offer a diverse range of camping
experiences, ranging from horseback riding to waterskiing; and would add dozens
of new activities for participating campers.
In the late 1960s, Solid Rock would even temporarily run its
own radio station, KSRM, as it tested its own range of influence. In fact, the
station’s call letters originally stood for Solid Rock Ministries.
Every year, it seemed, something new was added to the camp.
In fact, for Bert Schultz, who acted as camp director from 1961 to 1986, the
notion of newness became a sort of annual mantra: “Every year when camp
started, I wanted some new exciting thing for kids to do, so when they came
back to camp they could see a difference, see a change.”
“One year,” Donna added, “we didn’t have any money, but we
painted all the doors in the camp—red or something.” Always something new,
through a half-century and thousands upon thousands of campers, and even under
new leadership the camp continues to prosper.
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