BP’s Hat!

If you want a piece of really special Scouting memorabilia, tomorrow you have the chance to buy, at auction, Baden Powell’s Scout hat!

 

image

According to an article on the BBC, Gilwell sold the hat some time ago and now its owner wishes to sell it on. Of course this is a great opportunity for the collector of Scouting memorabilia, but it does beg the question ‘WHAT WERE THEY THINKING??????????’. Why on earth would they sell off one of the most recognisable symbols of Scouting? The SA really ought to buy it back!

It will be interesting to see where it ends up.

A Couple of Updates

Here are a couple of updates on the last two posts I’ve done.

First of all, here is a message from Bear Grylls, the UK Chief Scout, about the recent increase in numbers of Scouts in the UK.

Secondly, there is a report about the 350 new Queen’s Scouts meeting Prince Charles and Bear Grylls at the St. George’s Day parade in Windsor on the Scout Association’s website.

St. George’s Day Parade

Today hundreds of Scouts will parade through Windsor to meet up at Windsor Castle, will then inspected by Prince Charles and finally attend a service in St. George’s Chapel where they will renew their Scout Promise led by the Chief Scout, Bear Grylls.

To be able to go on this parade is an honour for all those Scouts who have become Queen’s Scouts over the past year.

I was able to attend this parade in 1992 when I was 21. I remember having to leave home at around 5 in the morning and being in an absolutely foul mood as I’d been to a friend’s 21st birthday party the night before! When we arrived in Windsor we had to go to an army barracks to do some marching practice. As a rule we don’t do marching in scouting these days, so the Sergeant  Major who was instructing us got a bit frustrated to say the least!

It was a cold and damp morning and we weren’t allowed to wear coats over our uniforms, so I was glad that I’d worn extra layers under my shirt! We paraded to the Castle and lined up on the parade ground and were then inspected by HM The Queen! I was terrified as I was on the front row and didn’t want to make a prat of myself if she decided to speak to me. She didn’t however, but at least I can say was inspected by the Queen!

We then marched into St. George’s Chapel for the service where we were led in the renewal of our promise by the then Chief Scout, Garth Morrison.

After the service, the time was our own and I spent the rest of the day sightseeing in Windsor with Mum and Dad.

It was certainly a talking point at work the following day, being able to say I spent my weekend being inspected by the Queen!

It was a great honour to take part in the parade.

If I can find them, I’ll put some of the photos on here!

On the Up!

Great news from the Scout Association today. The results of the 2010 census are in and the number of young people Scouting in the UK is up again! The membership now stands at 499,323, which is 3.45% up on last year! This is also the greatest growth in numbers since 1972. The other good news is that the number of adults are also up another 3.1%. However, as always, there is need for more adults as there are around 33,500 young people on waiting lists!

You can read the full story here.

It is interesting to note that the media are all being very positive about Scouting again and saying that Scouting is (obviously!) a good thing. Another interesting point is that again they are making a big thing about mentioning our Chief Scout Bear Grylls.

Of course it’s good to note that in my own little corner of Scouting, my Group’s numbers are also up again this year.

Scouting and Trains

Two of my favourite things!

There has long been a tradition of naming locomotives with Scouting related names. In the 1930’s the London Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) named 2 of their Royal Scot engines The Boy Scout (6169) and The Girl Guide (6168). Then in the early 1950’s British Railways named one of their new Britannia class engines after the then Chief Scout Lord Rowallan.

There was talk in 2007 that one of the train operating companies was going to name a train with a Scouting name to celebrate the 100 years of Scouting. However, nothing came of it.

This year sees the Union Pacific Railroad launch one of their locos in a livery celebrating the BSA’s centenary.

 

You can also read more about it here. It looks very impressive and I have to say I’m a bit jealous that I’ll not get to see it!

UP_2010

The Brand Centre

Back in October I mentioned that the Scout Association was setting up a Brand Centre for all the things we would need to be able to promote ourselves in a unified and professional way. Well it was launched a few weeks ago and as well as being able to download logos and letter templates, if you are a Leader, then you can log in and create flyers, posters banners etc. If you create, for example, a flyer, you can download it as a PDF to print off yourself or you can get them professionally printed – of course there is a cost involved!

One of the things I liked was the fact that you can generate your own logo! However, it doesn’t work very well! For example –

Porthill Logo

Now the lettering on the 1st Porthill bit, is all distorted and if you have the purple version-

D-BB52B4F5_00001_1

The colours of the logo and the writing is different! However there is a work around!

Pageflex Server [document: D-BB52B4F5_00001]

That’s better! One of the options is to preview the logo as a PDF before you create it. If you save the PDF and have access to Photoshop, which luckily I do through work, then it can be opened and converted to a JPG file or whatever your image file of choice is.

If you don’t have access to Photoshop, I don’t know how to convert the PDF to an image file, so if anyone knows of ways to do this, please let me know!

Happy Birthday Escouts

It was nice to note the other day that Escouts was celebrating its 9th birthday (so its a Cub then!). Escouts provide free web hosting to Scout Groups, Districts etc. in the UK and have some great forums. Its grown to be a great resource for UK Scouter and if ever someone has a question and / or problem, someone on Escouts will have an answer. The UK Chief Commissioner even has a page where people can ask him stuff, which is an exceptionally great way of keeping HQ in touch with people ‘at the coalface’!

So happy birthday Escouts, long may you continue!

Maps

On of the most useful skills a person can gain from Scouting is the ability to read and use maps. This skill is not only used when hiking, for example, but when going to a new place in the car. In fact, if I use a sat-nav to take me to a new place, I always like to check on the map before hand to see where I’m going.

Maps in the UK are produced in the UK by the Ordinance Survey and they have a wide range of accurate maps available at various scales. One thing they’ve recently announced is their OS Open Space project. This allows people to use the OS map data to include on their websites or create their own application using map data.

What this means in practice terms is that I can now put OS map information on my Group’s website, for example, to show where a camp site is.

This looks to be an interesting use of mapping information and it will be fascinating to see what people come up with.

Fundraising with an Unexpected Bonus

Last weekend, we took the Group to one of the local supermarkets (M & S) to raise some funds by packing the customer’s shopping bags (if they want us to!). We pack their bags and they give us a donation – at least that’s how we hope it goes!

Those of you who have read my stuff before will know that this is a great way to raise funds and that I hate doing it! This is only because I spent 13 years working in a supermarket, but I grit my teeth and do it as the positive outcomes outweigh my personal hates!

It was a great day’s fundraising and we made over £570! The big bonus, however, was meeting two old members of the Troop. These gentlemen were sitting down and just struck up conversations with us. Oddly enough, both conversations went similarly. Both asked which Group we were from and when told we were from 1st Porthill, they said ‘Oh I used to be a member there’. The first was a Scout in the 1940’s, during the war and the second in the late 1940’ searly 1950’s. Both told us about the camps they went on, the things they did and how they really enjoyed their time in the Scouts. They were also really interested to know we were still going and that so many young people are with us.

It was good being able to chat to these two gents and I wish we’d have had longer to talk to them!

Cheshire Network

I’ve just watched the below video from Cheshire’s Network (18 – 25 year olds). It’s an excellent advert to show what they get up to and is very professionally put together. Very impressive!

Just a shame that our County’s Network (Cheshire is less than 10 miles from where I live) isn’t as organised or proactive.

Harrods Stops Scouts Wearing Neckerchiefs and Woggles!

Bit of an own goal there Mr. Al-Fayed! It appears that a Group of Explorer Scouts who were in London were not allowed into Harrods as they were wearing their neckerchiefs! They were asked to remove them before they could enter, but to the Explorer’s credit they said no as it is a part of their uniform!

It seems that Harrods does have a bit of a history with this kind of thing, they banned some Guides a couple of years ago. You can read about the story here.

Seems like Harrods are furiously backtracking now and apologising ‘unreservedly’!

Still, it’s great to read one of the Leaders saying

To my horror they said we were going to have to take off our neckers and woggles.

I said, ‘definitely not’, I’m a Scout and it’s part of my identity.

Keeping the Bills Paid!

As we are all aware, life is getting more and more expensive. Running a camp site has never been a cheap task, but of course these days it is getting more expensive.

So it’s interesting to read that on of my local campsites, Barnswood, will be hosting a music type festival aimed at young people and families. Now of course there are a few NIMBYs who are objecting because of ‘noise’ and ‘extra traffic’ but if you’ve ever been to the site you’ll know it’s a wood in the middle of nowhere!

I think the camp are on to a good thing and hope that the money generated will help the camp’s running costs for many years!

The Funeral of a Scout

I wrote back in February about the sad death of Stephen Young.

This is a news item about his funeral. This is a celebration of that young man’s life.

Thanks to Lotta for bringing it to my attention.

Baden-Powell and The Nazis

On Monday 8th March, various previously classified documents from the 1930’s and 1940’s were placed in the National Archive. One of these documents concerned the relationship between the Hitler Youth, Scouting and BP. Of course all the media then blew up and started implying that Scouting was hand in hand with the Nazis! Indeed, I read a tweet on Twitter that went –

I never liked the Scouts. Nazi sympathisers it seems.

Oh dear!

However the WOSM have put out this statement

The Scout Movement victim of the Nazi regime

Geneva, 10 March 2010 — On the 8th of March, the security service of the United Kingdom submitted to the National Archives three bundles of declassified documents covering a period extending from 1937 to 1944. The World Scout Bureau acquired these documents for examination. These were essentially notes from the police declaring the coming and going of members of the Hitler Youth in the UK. Other parts are under the heading of the Nazi youth movement.

How Baden-Powell met with representatives of the Hitler Youth

Amongst all of these document pieces is a copy of a letter sent on November 20, 1937 by Baden-Powell to Joachim von Ribbentrop, German ambassador to London, thanking him for having received him on November 19, to meet Jochen Benemann and Hartmann Lauterbach, officials of the Hitler Youth. The tone of this letter is polite and diplomatic. It refers to the mutual feelings that the British and the Germans can exchange, Baden-Powell writes “I sincerely hope that we shall be able in the near future to give expression to it through the youth on both sides, and I will at once consult my headquarters and see what suggestions they can put forward”.

In one of these bundles of documents is a two-page report that Baden-Powell (hereafter BP) transmitted to the International Commissioner, where he states that “both [Lauterbacher] and Benemann are eager to see the Scouts get into closer touch with the German youth movement. He continued his report stating that Ribbentrop “sees in the Scout Movement a very powerful agency” to help bring together the two youths. To Ribbentrop, and as per the report by BP, “that the true peace between the two nations will depend on the youth being brought up on friendly terms together in forgetfulness of past differences”. This report carries no instructions from Baden-Powell to go along the suggestions proposed by Ribbentrop.

Lord Baden-Powell did not meet Hitler

In his report, Baden-Powell said that Ribbentrop would like him to go to Germany to meet Hitler. It is obvious that this meeting never took place. A week after his meeting with the ambassador, BP left for Africa. He returned to the UK for a short period in 1938 before returning permanently to Kenya October 27, 1938, where he died three years later.

In 1933 and 1937, World Scouting responds to the prohibition of Scouting by the Nazis

In January 1933, before the takeover by the Nazi Party, the Hitler Youth had expressed its hostility to Scouting, claiming that it alone could represent the youth of Germany. On the 17th of June, 1933, the Großdeutche Bund, a federation of many youth movements including a dozen Scout Movements was prohibited. On the 26th of May, 1934, a decree forbade the Reichschaft deutscher Pfadfinder, another federation of Scout Movements. The decree stated that the federation “had become a place of refuge for the young enemies of the new state.”

This solution marked the end of the Hitler Youth’s will to be recognized by the International Boy Scouts Bureau. Contacts were made during the jamboree in Hungary (August 1933) between them and the International Bureau, Hitler’s Youth sent its Chief of Staff Karl Nabersberg. He also went to the International Bureau in London in 1934, dressed in a Scout Uniform to negotiate contacts. He also sought to meet with the Scouts of France. But none of these contacts fell through and the dissolution of the Reichschaft deutscher Pfadfinder was one of the consequences.

In August, 1933, The World Scout Conference, held in Godöllo (Hungary), voted the following resolution (15/33), entitled “Political Propaganda”: “The Congress once again invites attention to the fact that any political propaganda of any character, direct or indirect, national or international, must not be permitted in any camp or scout gathering in which representatives of other nations are invited to participate.”
In 1937, the same World Conference was even more precise when it voted resolution 15/37 entitled “Patriotism”: “The Conference resolves that the International Committee be requested to do all that it can to ensure that Scouting and Rovering in all countries, while fostering true patriotism, are genuinely kept within the limits of international cooperation and friendship, irrespective of creed and race, as has always been outlined by the Chief Scout (Baden-Powell). Thus, any steps to the militarization of Scouting or the introduction of political aims, which might cause misunderstanding and thus handicap our work for peace and good will among nations and individuals should be entirely avoided in our programmes.”

Baden-Powell and the leaders of the International Bureau threatened by the Nazis in 1940

It is interesting to note that the Nazis invasion plan for the United-Kingdom, prepared in 1940 by the SS General Walter Schellenberg, foresaw the apprehension of about 2800 prominent British citizens, amongst whom was Lord Baden-Powell and the main leaders of the International Boy Scouts Bureau.

The invasion plan was accompanied by the document, “Informationsheft Groß Britannien” a book with information on British society: the administration, the education system, media, religious groups, political parties, unions, organizations of migrants , Freemasonry, Jewish organizations, police, secret services, described under the Nazi perspective.

Part of this Nazi book entitled “The education system” includes two sub-sections:”public schools” and ” The International Scout Movement”. Reading this text, a mixture of nonsense and very accurate information, makes us wonder. The Nazis believed that since Baden-Powell had been an intelligence officer in the British army, the Scouts he had created in 1907 had only been for the purpose of espionage for the benefit of England and commissioners of various international organizations had as their sole mission to prepare monthly and quarterly reports on the political economic and social life of their country for the International Scout Bureau. The portion devoted to Scouting is also an illustration of Nazi racism: Hubert Martin, Director of the International Bureau is described as “half Jewish”.

All these elements proves the lack of mutual sympathy that was between the Nazi regime Baden Powell and the Scout Movement. They should encourage today’s Scouts to reflect on their history to better understand the reality of their mission of peace, and to guard themselves against totalitarian regimes that have always tried to prohibit or restrict the Movement.

Of course, I know by now that some of the media will never let the facts get in the way of a good story! But it’s always interesting that certain sections of the media are so quick to criticise and put down the movement and very reluctant to be positive. Bad news sells of course!

Honesty

Yesterday as I was reversing my car to leave work, I wasn’t looking properly and hit a colleagues car! Luckily all I did was break my fog light and did no damage to the other car (phew!).

However, what did shock me was that my colleague was genuinely surprised that I’d told her! I guess that people are not expected to be honest these days.