50 Years of Camp Deerpark Buildings
50 Years of Camp Deerpark Directors
Dale Stoltzfus 1969–1977 “As the first director I always wanted other leaders to emerge. When Jerry and Leonor Kennell came to camp in 1975 they had the gifts needed to provide leadership. Since I was involved in some other activities in the city, I recommended to the board of directors that the Kennells begin to…
Read MoreA Beautiful Scene
Last fall I went with my dad to the annual Camp Deerpark homecoming. It was his third trip to camp in a month—he had already attended a pastors’ retreat and a two-day meeting of the New York City Council of Mennonite Churches (NYCCMC) Executive Committee. We were approaching the chapel when he commented that the…
Read MoreA Conscious Decision
It all began in the summer of 1998 when my mother enrolled me into summer camp without my permission, or willing consent, if you will. “But mom,” I cried, “I told you I wanted to go to the Fresh Air Fund, not Christian camp; it’s going to be so boring!” And to that my mother…
Read MoreA Place on the Hill
I began my journey with Camp Deerpark as a camper at 9 years old. My church was Burnside Mennonite Church, now called King of Glory Tabernacle. Camp Deerpark was one of the church’s outreach programs of the late ’70s. I remember I didn’t particularly enjoy camp in my early days, but as a teen camper…
Read MoreA Special Creation of God
James was a 9-year-old foster child from Brooklyn. He came to Camp Deerpark with his little brother, although they were not in the same foster family. Someone had instructed James to watch out for his brother while they were at camp. James took that charge very seriously and became overly protective. In the process he…
Read MoreA Whole Lot of Faith
John Smucker, originally from Bird-in-Hand, Pennsylvania, had been pastoring a Mennonite church plant in New York City for about 10 years when he first heard talk about the possibility of the New York City Mennonite churches buying and operating their own camp. His other pastor friends, Paul Burkholder, Glenn Zeager and John Freed, were looking…
Read MoreAcknowledging the Lenni-Lenape Native Americans
Camp Deerpark is nestled in the Shawangunk Mountains on the land that was once the home of the Lenape (len-AH-pay) or Lenni-Lenape Native American peoples. The Munsee, a subtribe of the Lenape, lived along the upper portion of the Delaware River. Shawangunk is a Dutch translation of the indigenous Munsee name “schawank,” meaning “that which…
Read MoreAt Freedom Farm Community
The first time Ann Rader-Hayes and her husband, Edgar Hayes, visited Camp Deerpark was for a church retreat in the year 2000. They were living at Menno House in Manhattan and attended Manhattan Mennonite Fellowship. In 2004, Ann and Edgar, along with Ann’s brother and sister-in-law, Benand Elka Rader, and parents, Bill and Clara Rader,…
Read MoreAuctions
In the fall of 1970 the first auction—a small affair—was held in Harleysville, Pennsylvania, to raise funds for Camp Deerpark. Dale remembers driving to Gid and Betty Miller’s house in New Jersey to pick up a crank phonograph to sell at the sale, one you had to wind up for it to play. Alvin Horning,…
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