Namanu remained a "girls only" camp until the late 1970s when the parent organization, now Camp Fire, made the executive decision to include boys in all areas of the program. However, Camp Namanu did not have boys and girls camping together in the same week until the mid-1980s.[citation needed]
During World War II, while Namanu was a girls-only camp, and while local women often worked in shipbuilding, many T2 tankers were made in nearby Portland.[citation needed]One T2 tanker was named the SS Camp Namanu. By the 1950s, Namanu had become one of the largest and oldest Camp Fire Girls camps in the U.S.[1]
In her autobiography, A Girl From Yamhill, children's author Beverly Cleary discussed her time as a Camp Fire Girl including attending Camp Namanu during the 1920s.[3] One of Cleary's popular novel characters, Ramona, is seen sporting a "Camp Namanu" shirt at the beginning of the live-action adaptation movie, Ramona and Beezus.[4]
Camp Kwoneesum
The Portland Metro Council also operated Camp Kwoneesum northeast of Washougal, Washington. Purchased in 1959,[5] the camp operated from 1965 to 1986. The camp's 1,800 acres (7.3 km2) were sold to Longview Fibre Company in 1987.[5] The camp featured an artificial lake with canoeing and sailing,[6] and more primitive camping than Namanu.