From Presidents to Astronauts, Eagle Scouts Shape the Nation — Now 22 Local Scouts Step Up

Feb 06, 2026 at 07:12 pm by WGNS News


MURFREESBORO, TN (WGNS) - Across the country — and even beyond Earth’s atmosphere — the rank of Eagle Scout has quietly shaped some of America’s most recognizable leaders. While only a small percentage of Scouts ever reach the top, those who do often carry the title into careers that influence government, science, business, and culture.

The most famous example is President Gerald R. Ford, the only U.S. president to earn the Eagle badge. His achievement is still celebrated by Scouts nationwide as proof that the path from troop meetings to national leadership is more than just a feel‑good slogan.

The legacy stretches far beyond politics. When Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon in 1969, he brought with him years of Scouting experience from his Ohio troop. Fellow astronauts James Lovell of Apollo 13 and Charles Duke of Apollo 16 also earned the rank, making Eagle Scouts a surprisingly common thread in NASA’s early exploration history.

In the world of business and public service, names like Sam Walton, founder of Walmart, and Rex Tillerson, former Secretary of State and ExxonMobil CEO, credit Scouting with shaping their early leadership skills. J.W. Marriott Jr., who helped expand the Marriott hotel empire, is another Eagle who often speaks about the discipline and responsibility the program instilled.

Filmmaker Steven Spielberg has said his early merit badge projects helped spark his love of storytelling.

Military leaders, including Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, commander of coalition forces during the Gulf War, round out the list of high‑profile Eagles whose careers were shaped by early lessons in service and leadership.

For local Scouts working toward the rank today, these national names serve as a reminder that the Eagle badge isn’t just a milestone — it’s a credential that travels with them for life. Whether they stay close to home or aim for the stars, they’re joining a tradition that has quietly influenced American life for more than a century.

Congratulations to 22 Local Eagle Scouts in 2025

And while those national names show how far the Eagle badge can carry someone, the tradition is just as strong here at home. This year, twenty-two young Scouts from across Rutherford County completed the long, demanding journey to become an Eagle Scout. Their projects, their leadership, and their commitment to service reflect the same values that shaped presidents, astronauts, and innovators — and now they’re adding their own chapters to that legacy.

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