Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell

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Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell,Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell, Template:Post-nominals (Template:IPAc-en Baden as in maiden; Powell as in Noel) (22 February 1857 – 8 January 1941), also known as B-P or Lord Baden-Powell, was a lieutenant-general in the British Army, writer, founder of the Scout Movement and first Chief Scout of The Boy Scouts Association.

After having been educated at Charterhouse School in Surrey, Baden-Powell served in the British Army from 1876 until 1910 in India and Africa. In 1899, during the Second Boer War in South Africa, Baden-Powell successfully defended the town in the Siege of Mafeking. Several of his military books, written for military reconnaissance and scout training in his African years, were also read by boys. Based on those earlier books, he wrote Scouting for Boys, published in 1908 by Sir Arthur Pearson, for youth readership. In 1907, he held the first Brownsea Island Scout camp, which is now seen as the beginning of Scouting.

The first Scout Rally was held at The Crystal Palace in 1909, at which appeared a number of girls dressed in Scout uniform, who told B-P that they were the "Girl Scouts", whereupon B-P and his sister Agnes Baden-Powell formed the Girl Guides Movement. After his marriage on 30 October 1912 to Olave St Clair Soames, Baden-Powell and his wife actively gave guidance to the Scouting and Girl Guiding Movements. Baden-Powell lived his last years in Nyeri, Kenya, where he died and was buried in 1941.[1][2]

Early life

Baden-Powell was born as Robert Stephenson Smyth Powell, or more familiarly as Stephe Powell, at 6 Stanhope Street (now 11 Stanhope Terrace), Paddington in London, on 22 February 1857.[3] He was named after his godfather, Robert Stephenson, the railway and civil engineer;[4] his third name was his mother's maiden name. His father Reverend Baden Powell, a Savilian Professor of Geometry at Oxford University, already had four teenage children from the second of his two previous marriages. On 10 March 1846 at St Luke's Church, Chelsea, Reverend Powell married Henrietta Grace Smyth (3 September 1824 – 13 October 1914), eldest daughter of Admiral William Henry Smyth and 28 years his junior. Quickly they had Warington (early 1847), George (late 1847), Augustus (1849) and Francis (1850). After three further children who died when very young, they had Stephe, Agnes (1858) and Baden (1860). The three youngest children and the often ill Augustus were close friends. Reverend Powell died when Stephe was three, and as tribute to his father and to set her own children apart from their half-siblings and cousins, the mother changed the family name to Baden-Powell. Subsequently, Stephe was raised by his mother, a strong woman who was determined that her children would succeed. Baden-Powell would say of her in 1933 "The whole secret of my getting on, lay with my mother.""[3][4][5]

After attending Rose Hill School, Tunbridge Wells, during which his favourite brother Augustus died, Stephe Baden-Powell was awarded a scholarship to Charterhouse, a prestigious public school. His first introduction to Scouting skills was through stalking and cooking game while avoiding teachers in the nearby woods, which were strictly out-of-bounds. He also played the piano and violin, was an ambidextrous artist, and enjoyed acting. Holidays were spent on yachting or canoeing expeditions with his brothers.[3]

Military career

In 1876, R.S.S. Baden-Powell, as he styled himself then, joined the 13th Hussars in India with the rank of lieutenant. He enhanced and honed his military scouting skills amidst the Zulu in the early 1880s in the Natal province of South Africa, where his regiment had been posted, and where he was Mentioned in Despatches. During one of his travels, he came across a large string of wooden beads, worn by the Zulu king Dinizulu, which was later incorporated into the Wood Badge training programme he started after he founded the Scouting Movement. Baden-Powell's skills impressed his superiors and he was brevetted Major as Military Secretary and senior Aide-de-camp of the Commander-in-Chief and Governor of Malta, his uncle General Sir Henry Augustus Smyth.[3] He was posted in Malta for three years, also working as intelligence officer for the Mediterranean for the Director of Military Intelligence.[3] He frequently travelled disguised as a butterfly collector, incorporating plans of military installations into his drawings of butterfly wings.[6]

File:Robert Baden-Powell in South Africa, 1896 (2).jpg
Baden-Powell in 1896

Baden-Powell returned to Africa in 1896, and served in the Second Matabele War, in the expedition to relieve British South Africa Company personnel under siege in Bulawayo.[7] This was a formative experience for him not only because he commanded reconnaissance missions into enemy territory in the Matopos Hills, but because many of his later Boy Scout ideas took hold here.[8] It was during this campaign that he first met and befriended the American scout Frederick Russell Burnham, who introduced Baden-Powell to stories of the American Old West and woodcraft (i.e., scoutcraft), and here that he wore his signature Stetson campaign hat and neckerchief for the first time.[3]

Baden-Powell was accused of illegally executing a prisoner of war in 1896, the Matabele chief Uwini, who had been promised his life would be spared if he surrendered. Uwini was shot by firing squad under Baden-Powell's instructions. Baden-Powell was cleared by the intervention of a military inquiry but the colonial civil authorities wanted a civil investigation and trial. Baden-Powell later claimed he was "released without a stain on my character." Baden-Powell was also accused of allowing native African warriors under his command to massacre enemy prisoners including women, children and non-combatants.[Citation needed]

After Rhodesia, Baden-Powell served in the Fourth Ashanti War in Gold Coast. In 1897, at the age of 40, he was brevetted colonel (the youngest colonel in the British Army) and given command of the 5th Dragoon Guards in India.[9] A few years later he wrote a small manual, entitled Aids to Scouting, a summary of lectures he had given on the subject of military scouting, much of it a written explanation of the lessons he had learned from Burnham, to help train recruits.[10] Using this and other methods he was able to train them to think independently, use their initiative, and survive in the wilderness.

File:SA-S654b-Boer War-Mafeking-10 Shillings (1900).jpg
Siege of Mafeking, 10 Shillings (1900), Boer War currency issued by authority of Colonel Robert Baden-Powell.

Baden-Powell returned to South Africa before the Second Boer War and was engaged in further military actions against the Zulus. He organised the Legion of Frontiersmen[Citation needed] to assist the regular army. Although instructed to maintain a mobile mounted force on the frontier with the Boer republic, Baden-Powell amassed stores and a garrison at Mafeking. While engaged in this, he and much of his intended mobile force was at Mafeking when it was surrounded by a Boer army, at times in excess of 8,000 men.

Baden-Powell was the garrison commander during the subsequent Siege of Mafeking, which lasted 217 days. Although Baden-Powell could have destroyed his stores and had sufficient forces to break out throughout much of the siege, especially since the Boers lacked adequate artillery to shell the town or its forces, he remained in the town to the point of his intended mounted soldiers eating their horses. The garrison held out until relieved, in part thanks to cunning deceptions devised by Baden-Powell. Fake minefields were planted and his soldiers pretended to avoid non-existent barbed wire while moving between trenches.[11] Baden-Powell did most of the reconnaissance work himself.[12] In one instance noting that the Boers had not removed the rail line, Baden-Powell loaded an armoured locomotive with sharpshooters and successfully sent it down the rails into the heart of the Boer encampment and back again in a strategic attempt to decapitate the Boer leadership.

File:Baden Powell.jpg
Baden-Powell on a patriotic postcard in 1900

Contrary views of Baden-Powell's actions during the siege argue that his success in resisting the Boers was secured at the expense of the lives of the native African soldiers and civilians, including members of his own African garrison. Pakenham stated that Baden-Powell drastically reduced the rations to the native garrison.[13] However, in 2001, after subsequent research, Pakenham decidedly retreated from this position.[3][14]

During the siege, the Mafeking Cadet Corps of white boys below fighting age stood guard, carried messages, assisted in hospitals, and so on, freeing grown men to fight. Baden-Powell did not form the Cadet Corps himself, and there is no evidence that he took much notice of them during the Siege. But he was sufficiently impressed with both their courage and the equanimity with which they performed their tasks to use them later as an object lesson in the first chapter of Scouting for Boys.

The siege was lifted on 16 May 1900. Baden-Powell was promoted to Major-General, and became a national hero.[15]

Briefly back in the United Kingdom in October 1901, Baden-Powell was invited to visit King Edward VII at Balmoral, the monarch's Scottish retreat, and personally invested as Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB).[16]

After organising the South African Constabulary, a colonial police force, he returned to England to take up a post as Inspector General of Cavalry in 1903. While holding this position, Baden-Powell was instrumental in reforming reconnaissance training in British cavalry, giving the force an important advantage in scouting ability over continental rivals.[17] In 1907 he was appointed to command the Northumbrian Division of the newly formed Territorial Force.[18]

In 1910 Lieutenant-General Baden-Powell decided to retire from the Army, allegedly on the advice of King Edward VII that he could better serve his country by promoting Scouting.[19][20]

On the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Baden-Powell put himself at the disposal of the War Office. No command was given to him. Lord Kitchener said: "he could lay his hand on several competent divisional generals but could find no one who could carry on the invaluable work of the Boy Scouts."[21] It was widely rumoured that Baden-Powell was engaged in spying, and intelligence officers took great care to spread the myth.[22]

Scouting movement

Template:Quote box On his return from Africa in 1903, Baden-Powell found that his military training manual, Aids to Scouting, had become a best-seller, and was being used by teachers and youth organisations.[23] Following his involvement in the Boys' Brigade as Brigade Secretary and Officer in charge of its scouting section, with encouragement from his friend, William Alexander Smith, Baden-Powell decided to re-write Aids to Scouting to suit a youth readership. In August 1907 he held a camp on Brownsea Island to test out his ideas. About twenty boys attended: eight from local Boys' Brigade companies, and about twelve public school boys, mostly sons of his friends.

Baden-Powell was also influenced by Ernest Thompson Seton, who founded the Woodcraft Indians. Seton gave Baden-Powell a copy of his book The Birch Bark Roll of the Woodcraft Indians and they met in 1906.[24][25] The first book on the Scout Movement, Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys was published in six instalments in 1908, and has sold approximately 150 million copies as the fourth best-selling book of the 20th century.[26]

File:Butt, Baden-Powell, Taft, Bryce2.jpg
Reviewing the Boy Scouts of Washington D.C. from the portico of the White House: Baden-Powell, President Taft, British ambassador Bryce (1912)

Boys and girls spontaneously formed Scout troops and the Scouting Movement had inadvertently started, first as a national, and soon an international phenomenon. The Scouting Movement was to grow up in friendly parallel relations with the Boys' Brigade. A rally for all Scouts was held at Crystal Palace in London in 1909, at which Baden-Powell discovered the first Girl Scouts. The Girl Guide Movement was subsequently formalised in 1910 under the auspices of Baden-Powell's sister, Agnes Baden-Powell. Baden-Powell's friend Juliette Gordon Low was encouraged by him to bring the Movement to the United States, where she founded the Girl Scouts of the USA.

In 1920, the 1st World Scout Jamboree took place in Olympia in West Kensington, and Baden-Powell was acclaimed Chief Scout of the World. Baden-Powell was created a Baronet in 1921 and Baron Baden-Powell, of Gilwell, in the County of Essex, on 17 September 1929, Gilwell Park being the International Scout Leader training centre.[27] After receiving this honour, Baden-Powell mostly styled himself "Baden-Powell of Gilwell".

File:Scouting pioneers.jpg
Three Scouting pioneers: Robert Baden-Powell (seated), Ernest T. Seton (left), and Dan Beard (right)

In 1929, during the 3rd World Scout Jamboree, he received as a present a new 20-horsepower Rolls-Royce car (chassis number GVO-40, registration OU 2938) and an Eccles Caravan.[28] This combination well served the Baden-Powells in their further travels around Europe. The caravan was nicknamed Eccles and is now on display at Gilwell Park. The car, nicknamed Jam Roll, was sold after his death by Olave Baden-Powell in 1945. Jam Roll and Eccles were reunited at Gilwell for the 21st World Scout Jamboree in 2007. Recently it has been purchased on behalf of Scouting and is owned by a charity, B-P Jam Roll Ltd. Funds are being raised to repay the loan that was used to purchase the car.[28][29] Baden-Powell also had a positive impact on improvements in youth education.[30] Under his dedicated command the world Scouting movement grew. By 1922 there were more than a million Scouts in 32 countries; by 1939 the number of Scouts was in excess of 3.3 million.[31]

At the 5th World Scout Jamboree in 1937, Baden-Powell gave his farewell to Scouting, and retired from public Scouting life. 22 February, the joint birthday of Robert and Olave Baden-Powell, continues to be marked as Founder's Day by Scouts and Thinking Day by Guides to remember and celebrate the work of the Chief Scout and Chief Guide of the World.

In his final letter to the Scouts, Baden-Powell wrote:

... I have had a most happy life and I want each one of you to have a happy life too. I believe that God put us in this jolly world to be happy and enjoy life. Happiness does not come from being rich, nor merely being successful in your career, nor by self-indulgence. One step towards happiness is to make yourself healthy and strong while you are a boy, so that you can be useful and so you can enjoy life when you are a man. Nature study will show you how full of beautiful and wonderful things God has made the world for you to enjoy. Be contented with what you have got and make the best of it. Look on the bright side of things instead of the gloomy one. But the real way to get happiness is by giving out happiness to other people. Try and leave this world a little better than you found it and when your turn comes to die, you can die happy in feeling that at any rate you have not wasted your time but have done your best. 'Be Prepared' in this way, to live happy and to die happy — stick to your Scout Promise always — even after you have ceased to be a boy — and God help you to do it.[32]

Personal life

File:Olave Baden-Powell.jpg
Olave Baden-Powell

In January 1912, Baden-Powell was en route to New York on a Scouting World Tour, on the ocean liner Template:SS, when he met Olave St Clair Soames.[33][34] She was 23, while he was 55; they shared the same birthday, 22 February. They became engaged in September of the same year, causing a media sensation due to Baden-Powell's fame. To avoid press intrusion, they married in private on 30 October 1912, at St Peter's Church in Parkstone.[35] The Scouts of England each donated a penny to buy Baden-Powell a wedding gift, a car (note that this is not the Rolls-Royce they were presented with in 1929). There is a monument to their marriage inside St Mary's Church, Brownsea Island.

File:Baden Powell grave1.jpg
Baden-Powell grave

Baden-Powell and Olave lived in Pax Hill near Bentley, Hampshire from about 1919 until 1939.[36] The Bentley house was a gift of her father.[37] Directly after he had married, Baden-Powell began to suffer persistent headaches, which were considered by his doctor to be of psychosomatic origin and treated with dream analysis.[3] The headaches disappeared upon his moving into a makeshift bedroom set up on his balcony.

In 1939, Baden-Powell and Olave moved to a cottage he had commissioned in Nyeri, Kenya, near Mount Kenya, where he had previously been to recuperate. The small one-room house, which he named Paxtu, was located on the grounds of the Outspan Hotel, owned by Eric Sherbrooke Walker, Baden-Powell's first private secretary and one of the first Scout inspectors.[3] Walker also owned the Treetops Hotel, approximately 17 km out in the Aberdare Mountains, often visited by Baden-Powell and people of the Happy Valley set. The Paxtu cottage is integrated into the Outspan Hotel buildings and serves as a small Scouting museum.

Baden-Powell died on 8 January 1941 and is buried at St. Peter's Cemetery in Nyeri.[38] His gravestone bears a circle with a dot in the centre "ʘ", which is the trail sign for "Going home", or "I have gone home":[39] When his wife Olave died, her ashes were sent to Kenya and interred beside her husband. Kenya has declared Baden-Powell's grave a national monument.[40]

Significant family members

File:Baden-Powell family (1917).jpg
Baden-Powell with wife and three children, 1917

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In addition, when Olave's sister Auriol Davidson (née Soames) died in 1919, Olave and Robert took her three nieces, Christian (1912–1975), Clare (1913–1980), and Yvonne, (1918–1995?), into their family and brought them up as their own children.

Personal beliefs

File:'Are you in this' poster.jpg
A World War I propaganda poster drawn by Baden-Powell

Tim Jeal, who wrote the biography Baden-Powell, argued that Baden-Powell's distrust of communism led to his implicit support, through naïveté, of fascism. Baden-Powell admired Benito Mussolini early in the Italian fascist leader's career. In 1939 Baden-Powell noted in his diary: "Lay up all day. Read Mein Kampf. A wonderful book, with good ideas on education, health, propaganda, organisation etc. – and ideals which Hitler does not practise himself."[3]Template:Rp

Some early Scouting "Thanks" badges (from 1911) and the Scouting "Medal of Merit" badge had a swastika symbol on them.[41][42] According to biographer Michael Rosenthal, Baden-Powell used the swastika because he was a Nazi sympathiser. Jeal, however, argues that Baden-Powell was ignorant of the symbol's growing association with Nazism and that he used the symbol for its centuries-old meaning of "good luck" in India. (The Nazis included Baden-Powell in "The Black Book" in a 1940 list of people slated for detention following the planned conquest of the United Kingdom. Nazism regarded Scouting as a dangerous espionage organisation.[43]) When Nazi use of the swastika became well-known, the Scouts stopped using it. Nazi Germany banned Scouting in June 1934, seeing it as "a haven for young men opposed to the new State".[44]

Michael Rosenthal notes "a coherent ideology stressing unquestioning obedience to properly structured authority; happy acceptance of one's social and economic position in life; and an unwavering, uncritical patriotism".[45]

Artist and writer

Baden-Powell made paintings and drawings almost every day of his life. Most have a humorous or informative character.[3] He published books and other texts during his years of military service both to finance his life and to educate his men.[3]

Baden-Powell was regarded as an excellent storyteller. During his whole life he told "ripping yarns" to audiences.[3] After having published Scouting for Boys, Baden-Powell kept on writing more handbooks and educative materials for all Scouts, as well as directives for Scout Leaders. In his later years, he also wrote about the Scout movement and his ideas for its future. He spent the last decade of his life in Africa, and many of his later books had African themes. Currently, many pages of his field diary, complete with drawings, are on display at the National Scouting Museum in Irving, Texas.

Baden-Powell was keen on amateur theatricals, from Charterhouse public school where among other roles he played female operatic roles. In the army he made a speciality of female roles and would often make his own dresses. His stage specialty was what he called his skirt dance.

Sexuality

Some modern authors have explained Baden-Powell's interest in boys as a chaste manifestation of homosexual sensibilities. Among these historians are Tim Jeal, author of Baden-Powell: Founder of the Boy Scouts and Michael Rosenthal of Columbia University, in The character factory: Baden-Powell and the origins of the Boy Scout movement.[46] Other historians have been less sympathetic; Kenneth Morgan of Oxford, in The Boer War and the Media, refers to Baden-Powell's "probable pederasty" as a character defect covered up by the media.[47]

There is however, no evidence of his ever engaging in sexual activity with any males. He was adamant against Scoutmasters engaging in sexual contact with their charges, recommending flogging for transgressors. Baden-Powell believed strongly in the negative effects of masturbation - a view not shared by all educators of his time - and counseled Scouts to restrain the sexual impulse as far as possible. An exhortation against masturbation, written by Baden-Powell for inclusion in an early scouting manual, was so graphic that his printer refused to print it unedited.

Along with many other pieces of evidence for his contention, Jeal mentions as illustrative an episode which occurred in November of 1919. While on a visit to Charterhouse, his old public school, he stayed with an old friend, A. H. Tod, a bachelor teacher and housemaster who had taken large numbers of nude photographs of his pupils as part of a photographic record of public school life. Baden-Powell's diary entry about his stay reads: "Stayed with Tod. Tod's photos of naked boys and trees. Excellent." In a subsequent communication to Tod regarding starting up a Scout troop at the school, Baden-Powell mentions his impending return visit and adds: "Possibly I might get a further look at those wonderful photographs of yours."

Tod's pictures survived until the 1960's, when they were destroyed reportedly in order to "protect Tod's reputation." We are told, however (by R. Jenkyns), that the album contained nude boys in poses which were in his opinion "contrived and artificial." There is no reason to suspect that either Tod or Powell's relations were anything but chaste, and the pictures were in keeping with the contemporary tradition of male art exemplified by Henry Scott Tuke's paintings, Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden's photography, and others.

Jeal also mentions that Baden-Powell ". . . consistently praised the male body when naked and denigrated the female. At Gilwell Park, the Scouts' camping ground in Epping Forest, he always enjoyed watching the boys swimming naked, and would sometimes chat with them after they had just 'stripped off.'" (Personal communications between Jeal and old scouts)

Despite his appreciation for the beauty of young boys, Baden-Powell is not known to have acted on his suspected attraction with any of the boys. Indeed, he was adamant about the need to restrain the sexual impulse, especially in his communications with boys. He incorporated a graphic prohibition against masturbation in early scouting manuals (so graphic that Cox, his printer, refused to run the presses till the mention was watered down), and into his eighties carried on correspondences with individual scouts exhorting them to control their urge for "self-abuse." He subscribed to the commonly held turn-of-the-century opinion that the practice led to disease, madness and sexual impotence. His views were not shared by all. Dr. F. W. W. Griffin, editor of The Scouter, wrote in 1930 in a book for Rover Scouts that the temptation to masturbate was "a quite natural stage of development" and steered scouts to a text by H. Havelock Ellis that held that "the effort to achieve complete abstinence was a very serious error." (Tim Jeal, Baden-Powell: Founder of the Boy Scouts 1989, pp. 93-94)

Works

Template:Div col Military books

  • 1884: Reconnaissance and Scouting
  • 1885: Cavalry Instruction
  • 1889: Pigsticking or Hoghunting
  • 1896: The Downfall of Prempeh
  • 1897: The Matabele Campaign
  • 1899: Aids to Scouting for N.-C.Os and Men
  • 1900: Sport in War
  • 1901: Notes and Instructions for the South African Constabulary
  • 1914: Quick Training for War

Scouting books

Other books

  • 1905: Ambidexterity (co-authored with John Jackson)
  • 1915: Indian Memories
  • 1915: My Adventures as a Spy[51]
  • 1916: Young Knights of the Empire: Their Code, and Further Scout Yarns[52]
  • 1921: An Old Wolf's Favourites
  • 1927: Life's Snags and How to Meet Them
  • 1933: Lessons From the Varsity of Life
  • 1934: Adventures and Accidents
  • 1936: Adventuring to Manhood
  • 1937: African Adventures
  • 1938: Birds and Beasts of Africa
  • 1939: Paddle Your Own Canoe
  • 1940: More Sketches Of Kenya

Sculpture

File:Scouting for boys 1 1908.jpg
Cover of first part of Scouting for Boys, January 1908

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Quotes on boys and scouting

This was not in the original Wikipedia article: the source is http://www.scouting.org/filestore/pdf/Quotes.pdf

“A boy on joining wants to begin Scouting right away.”

“A fisherman does not bait his hook with food he likes. He uses food the fish likes. So with boys.”

“Scouting is a man’s job cut down to a boy’s size.”

“Scouting is a game for boys under the leadership of boys under the direction of a man.”

“Where is there a boy to whom the call of the wild and the open road does not appeal?”

“It is important to arrange games and competition so that all Scouts of the troop take part.”

“We are not a club or a Sunday school class, but a school of the woods.”

“Fun, fighting, and feeding! These are the three indispensable elements of the boy’s world.”

“Scoutmasters need to enter into boys’ ambitions.”

“A boy is supremely confident of his own power, and dislikes being treated as a child.”

“Boys can see adventure in a dirty old duck puddle, and if the Scoutmaster is a boys’ man he can see it, too.”

“A boy can see the smoke rising from Sioux villages under the shadow of the Albert memorial.”

“Teach Scouts not how to get a living, but how to live.”

“We must change boys from a ‘what can I get’ to a ‘what can I give’ attitude.”

“The code of the knight is still the code of the gentleman today.”

“The real way to gain happiness is to give it to others.”

“In Scouting you are combating the brooding of selfishness.”

“Scoutmasters deal with the individual boy rather than with the mass.”

“Can we not interpret our adult wisdom into the language of boyhood?”

“It is only when you know a boy’s environment that you can know what influences to bring to bear.”

“It’s the spirit within, not the veneer without, that makes a man.”

“It is risky to order a boy not to do something; it immediately opens to him the adventure of doing it.”

“You can only get discipline in the mass by discipline in the individual.”

“The Scoutmaster must be alert to check badge hunting as compared to badge earning.”

“The Scout Oath and Law are our binding disciplinary force.”

“A week of camp life is worth six months of theoretical teaching in the meeting room.”

“A boy is not a sitting-down animal.”

“Vigorous Scout games are the best form of physical education because most of them bring in moral education.”

“An invaluable step in character training is to put responsibility on the individual.”

“When a boy finds someone who takes an interest in him, he responds and follows.”


111

Pearls of Wisdom—Quotes from Baden-Powell


“The sport in Scouting is to find the good in every boy and develop it.”

“Success in training the boy depends largely on the Scoutmaster’s own personal example.”

“Correcting bad habits cannot be done by forbidding or punishment.”

“Show me a poorly uniformed troop and I’ll show you a poorly uniformed leader.”

“The more responsibility the Scoutmaster gives his patrol leaders, the more they will respond.”

“It should be the thing never to mention unfairness of judging when defeated in a contest.”

“The Scoutmaster teaches boys to play the game by doing so himself.”

“O God, help me to win, but in thy wisdom if thou willest me not to win, then O God, make me a good loser.”

“There is no teaching to compare with example.”

“We do not want to make Scout training too soft.”

“The Good Turn will educate the boy out of the groove of selfishness.”

“When you want a thing done, ‘Don’t do it yourself’ is a good motto for Scoutmasters.”

“Loyalty is a feature in a boy’s character that inspires boundless hope.”

“See things from the boy’s point of view.”

“The boy is not governed by don’t, but is led by do.

“The object of the patrol method is not so much saving the Scoutmaster trouble as to give responsibility to the boy.”

“The most important object in Boy Scout training is to educate, not instruct.”

“Scoutmasters need the capacity to enjoy the out-of-doors.”

“A boy is naturally full of humor.”

“If you make listening and observation your occupation you will gain much more than you can by talk.”

“A boy carries out suggestions more wholeheartedly when he understands their aim.”

“The Scoutmaster guides the boy in the spirit of an older brother.”

“To get a hold on boys you must be their friend.”

“In Scouting, a boy is encouraged to educate himself instead of being instructed.”

“The spirit is there in every boy; it has to be discovered and brought to light.”

112

Awards

File:Robert Baden-Powell Monument London.jpg
Statue of Baden-Powell by Don Potter in front of Baden-Powell House in London
File:Baden Powell plaque.png
Memorial to Baden-Powell, "Chief Scout of the World", at Westminster Abbey

In 1937 Baden-Powell was appointed to the Order of Merit, one of the most exclusive awards in the British honours system, and he was also awarded 28 decorations by foreign states, including the Grand Officer of the Portuguese Order of Christ,[54] the Grand Commander of the Greek Order of the Redeemer (1920),[55] the Commander of the French Légion d'honneur (1925), the First Class of the Hungarian Order of Merit (1929), the Grand Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog of Denmark, the Grand Cross of the Order of the White Lion, the Grand Cross of the Order of the Phoenix, and the Order of Polonia Restituta.

The Silver Wolf Award worn by Robert Baden-Powell is handed down the line of his successors, with the current Chief Scout, Bear Grylls, wearing this original award.

The Bronze Wolf Award, the only distinction of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, awarded by the World Scout Committee for exceptional services to world Scouting, was first awarded to Baden-Powell by a unanimous decision of the then International Committee on the day of the institution of the Bronze Wolf in Stockholm in 1935. He was also the first recipient of the Silver Buffalo Award in 1926, the highest award conferred by the Boy Scouts of America.

In 1927, at the Swedish National Jamboree he was awarded by the Österreichischer Pfadfinderbund with the "Großes Dankabzeichen des ÖPB.[56]Template:Rp

In 1931 Baden-Powell received the highest award of the First Austrian Republic (Großes Ehrenzeichen der Republik am Bande) out of the hands of President Wilhelm Miklas.[56]Template:Rp Baden-Powell was also one of the first and few recipients of the Goldene Gemse, the highest award conferred by the Österreichischer Pfadfinderbund.[57]

In 1931, Major Frederick Russell Burnham dedicated Mount Baden-Powell[58] in California to his old Scouting friend from forty years before.[59][60] Today their friendship is honoured in perpetuity with the dedication of the adjoining peak, Mount Burnham.[61]

Baden-Powell was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize on numerous occasions, including 10 separate nominations in 1928.[62] He was awarded the Wateler Peace Prize in 1937.[63]

In 2002, Baden-Powell was named in the BBC's list of the 100 Greatest Britons following a UK-wide vote.[64]

As part of the Scouting 2007 Centenary, Nepal renamed Urkema Peak to Baden-Powell Peak.[65]

Styles

The family name legally changed from Powell to Baden-Powell by Royal Licence on 30 April 1902.[27]
  • 1857–1860: Robert Stephenson Smyth Powell
  • 1860–1876: Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 1876: Second-Lieutenant Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 1876–1884: Lieutenant Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 1884–1892: Captain Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 1892–1896: Major Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 1896–25 April 1897: Major (Bvt. Lieutenant-Colonel) Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 25 April – 8 May 1897: Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 7 May 1897 – 1900: Lieutenant-Colonel (Bvt. Colonel) Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 1900–1901: Major-General Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
  • 1901–1907: Major-General Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, CB
  • 1907–3 October 1909: Lieutenant-General Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, CB
  • 3 October – 9 November 1909: Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, KCVO, CB
  • 9 November 1909 – 1912: Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, KCB, KCVO
  • 1912–1921: Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, KCB, KCVO, KStJ
  • 1921–1923: Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, Bt., KCB, KCVO, KStJ
  • 1923–1927: Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, Bt., GCVO, KCB, KStJ
  • 1927–1929: Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, Bt., GCMG, GCVO, KCB, KStJ
  • 1929–1937: Lieutenant-General The Right Honourable The Lord Baden-Powell, GCMG, GCVO, KCB, KStJ
  • 1937–1941: Lieutenant-General The Right Honourable The Lord Baden-Powell, OM, GCMG, GCVO, KCB, KStJ

Promotions

Honours

British

File:Coat of Arms of Baron Baden-Powell.svg
Coat of Arms of Lord Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell of Gilwell.
  • Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) - 9 November 1909[76] (CB: 1901)
  • Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) - 1 January 1923[77] (KCVO: 3 October 1909)[78]
  • Knight of Grace of the Venerable Order of St. John (KStJ) - 23 May 1912[79]
  • Baronet - 1 January 1921[80] (dated 21 February 1923[81])
  • Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George (GCMG) - 3 June 1927[82]
  • Baron Baden-Powell, of Gilwell in the County of Essex - 17 September 1929[83]
  • Member of the Order of Merit (OM) - 11 May 1937[84]

Others

  • Grand Officer of the Order of Christ of Portugal (GOC) - 7 October 1919[85]
  • Grand Commander of the Order of the Redeemer of the Kingdom of Greece - 21 October 1920[86]
  • Grand Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog of Denmark - 11 October 1921[87]

Arms

Template:Infobox COA wide

See also

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Notes

  1. B-P Gallery:. Pinetreeweb.com (16 May 1997). Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  2. The Scouting Pages. The Scouting Pages (9 August 1907). Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named jeal
  4. Palstra, Theo P.M. (April 1967) (in nl). Baden-Powell, zijn leven en werk. Den Haag: De Nationale Padvindersraad. 
  5. Drewery, Mary (1975). Baden-Powell: The Man Who Lived Twice. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-18102-8. 
  6. Baden-Powell, Sir Robert (1915). My Adventures As A Spy. Pine Tree Web. Retrieved on 17 June 2009.
  7. Baden-Powell, Robert (1897). The Matabele Campaign, 1896. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-8371-3566-4. 
  8. Proctor, Tammy M. (July 2000). "A Separate Path: Scouting and Guiding in Interwar South Africa". Comparative Studies in Society and History 42 (3). ISSN 0010-4175. 
  9. Barrett, C.R.B. (1911). History of The XIII. Hussars. Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons. http://www.pinetreeweb.com/bp-hussars.htm. Retrieved on 2 January 2007. 
  10. First Scouting Handbook. Order of the Arrow, Boy Scouts of America. Retrieved on 30 July 2013.
  11. Latimer, Jon (2001). Deception in War. London: John Murray. pp. 32–5. 
  12. Arthur Conan Doyle (1901). The Siege of Mafeking. Pine Tree Web. Retrieved on 17 November 2006.
  13. Pakenham, Thomas (1979). The Boer War. New York: Avon Books. ISBN 0-380-72001-9. 
  14. Pakenham, Thomas (2001). The Siege of Mafeking. 
  15. Robert Baden-Powell: Defender of Mafeking and Founder of the Boy Scouts and the Girl Guides. Past Exhibition Archive. National Portrait Gallery, London. Retrieved on 2 November 2010.
  16. Template:Cite newspaper The Times
  17. Jones, Spencer. Scouting for Soldiers: Reconnaissance and the British Cavalry, 1899 – 1914. War in History. Retrieved on 27 June 2012.
  18. Reported as "a Yorkshire division" in The Times, 29 October 1907, p.6; the Dictionary of National Biography lists it as the Northumbrian Division, which encompassed units from the North and East Ridings of Yorkshire as well as Northumbria proper.
  19. Baden-Powell, Robert; Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell Baden-Powell of Gilwell, Robert; Boehmer, Elleke (2005). Scouting for Boys: A Handbook for Instruction in Good Citizenship. Oxford University Press. p. lv. ISBN 978-0-19-280246-0. http://books.google.com/?id=ej0P_lyMEFkC&pg=PR55. 
  20. Lord Robert Baden-Powell "B-P" – Chief Scout of the World. The Wivenhoe Encyclopedia. Retrieved on 17 November 2006.
  21. Saint George Saunders, Hilary (1948). "Chapter II, Enterprise, Lord Baden-Powell". The Left Handshake. http://pinetreeweb.com/bp-memorial.htm. Retrieved on 2 January 2007. 
  22. Baden-Powell, Sir Robert (1915). My Adventures as a Spy. PineTree.web. Retrieved on 17 November 2006.
  23. Peterson, Robert (2003). Marching to a Different Drummer. Scouting. Boy Scouts of America. Retrieved on 2 January 2007.
  24. Ernest Thompson Seton and Woodcraft. InFed (2002). Retrieved on 7 December 2006.
  25. Robert Baden-Powell as an Educational Innovator. InFed (2002). Retrieved on 7 December 2006.
  26. Extrapolation for global range of other language publications, and related to the number of Scouts, make a realistic estimate of 100 to 150 million books. Details from Jeal, Tim. Baden-Powell. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09-170670-X. 
  27. 27.0 27.1 27.2 Family history, Person Page 876. The Peerage. Retrieved on 1 January 2007.
  28. 28.0 28.1 What ever happened to Baden-Powell's Rolls Royce?. Retrieved on 8 November 2008.
  29. "Johnny" Walker's Scouting Milestones (20 July 2008). Retrieved on 21 February 2014.
  30. Baden-Powell as an Educational Innovator. Infed Thinkers. Retrieved on 4 February 2006.
  31. Nagy, László (1985). 250 million Scouts. Geneva: World Scout Foundation. 
  32. Baden-Powell, Sir Robert. B-P's final letter to the Scouts. Girl Guiding UK. Retrieved on 4 August 2007.
  33. Baden-Powell, Olave. Window on My Heart. The Autobiography of Olave, Lady Baden-Powell, G.B.E.as told to Mary Drewery. Hodder & Stoughton. Retrieved on 16 November 2006.
  34. Fact Sheet: The Three Baden-Powell's: Robert, Agnes, and Olave (PDF). Girl Guides of Canada. Archived from the original on 9 March 2008.
  35. Olave St Clair Baden-Powell (née Soames), Baroness Baden-Powell; Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell. National Portrait Gallery, London. Retrieved on 16 November 2006.
  36. Wey People, the Big Names of the Valley. Wey River freelance community. Retrieved on 29 April 2007.
  37. Wade, Eileen K.. Pax Hill. PineTree Web. Retrieved on 16 November 2006.
  38. "B-P" – Chief Scout of the World. Baden-Powell. World Organization of the Scout Movement. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007.
  39. Template:Find a Grave
  40. Template:Find a Grave
  41. Gresh, Lois H.; Weinberg, Robert (2008). Why Did It Have To Be Snakes: From Science to the Supernatural, The Many Mysteries of Indiana Jones. John Wiley & Sons. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-470-22556-1. http://books.google.com/books?id=tAc7BESPBYkC. Retrieved on 18 December 2013. "The symbol [swastika] was used on the Thanks Badge, created in 1911. The swastika had been a symbol for luck in India long before being adopted by the Nazis, and Baden-Powell would have come across it during his years serving in that country. In 1922, the swastika was incorporated into the design for the Medal of Merit. The symbol was dropped by the Boy Scouts in 1934 because of its use by the Nazi Party." 
  42. Boy Scout medal with fleur-de-lis and swastika, 1930s. The Learning Federation. Retrieved on 3 September 2008.
  43. Schellenberg, Walter (2000). Invasion, 1940: The Nazi Invasion Plan for Britain. London: St Ermin's Press. 
  44. Laqueur, Walter. Young Germany: A History of the German Youth Movement. Transaction Books. pp. 201–202. ISBN 0-88738-002-6. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=d5po4b0U2xEC&pg=PA201&lpg=PA201. 
  45. Rosenthal, Michael (1986). The Character Factory: Baden-Powell and the Origins of the Boy Scout Movement. Pantheon Books. p. 7. http://books.google.com/books?id=UQ-4AAAAIAAJ. Retrieved on 18 December 2013. "While the Scout factory for the turning out of serviceable citizens could not vouch for the uniformity of its finished product, its aspirations for such uniformity were nonetheless real. Both specifications and uses, in this case, were supplied by a coherent ideology stressing unquestioning obedience to properly structured authority; happy acceptance of one's social and economic position in life; and an unwavering, uncritical patriotism." 
  46. Rosenthal, Michael (1986). The character factory: Baden-Powell and the origins of the Boy Scout movement. Pantheon. 
  47. The Boer War and the Media (1899-1902). Twentieth Century British History. Retrieved on February 05, 2006.
  48. Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell (1921). What Scouts Can Do: More Yarns. http://www.pinetreeweb.com/bp-can1.htm. Retrieved on 1 August 2007. 
  49. "B-P prepared a farewell message to his Scouts, for publication after his death". Scouts.org.
  50. West, James E.; Lamb, Peter O. (1932). He-who-sees-in-the-dark; the Boys' Story of Frederick Burnham, the American Scout. illustrated by Lord Baden-Powell. New York: Brewer, Warren and Putnam; Boy Scouts of America. 
  51. Template:Gutenberg
  52. Template:Gutenberg
  53. John Smith. The Library of Virginia. Retrieved on 29 July 2007.
  54. "Supplement to the London Gazette". London Gazette. 1 June 1920. http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/31928/supplements/6176. Retrieved on 17 June 2009. 
  55. "Decoration Conferred by His Majesty the King of the Hellenes". The London Gazette. 22 October 1920. http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/32095/pages/10197/page.pdf. Retrieved on 10 February 2010. 
  56. 56.0 56.1 Pribich, Kurt (2004) (in German). Logbuch der Pfadfinderverbände in Österreich. Vienna: Pfadfinder-Gilde-Österreichs. 
  57. Wilceczek, Hans Gregor (1931) (in German). Georgsbrief des Bundesfeldmeisters für das Jahr 1931 an die Wölflinge, Pfadfinder, Rover und Führer im Ö.P.B.. Vienna: Österreichischer Pfadfinderbund. p. 4. 
  58. [[[:Template:Gnis3]] Mount Baden-Powell]. USGS. Retrieved on 17 April 2006.
  59. Dedication of Mount Baden-Powell. The Pine Tree Web. Retrieved on 23 April 2006.
  60. Burnham, Frederick Russell (1944). Taking Chances. Haynes. xxv–xxix. ISBN 1-879356-32-5. 
  61. [[[:Template:Gnis3]] Mapping Service]. Mount Burnham. Retrieved on 17 April 2006.
  62. Nomination Database: Baden-Powell. The Nomination Database for the Nobel Peace Prize, 1901–1956. Retrieved on 2 November 2010.
  63. Lijst van Laureaten van de Carnegie Wateler Vredesprijs. Retrieved on 11 July 2013.
  64. "100 great Britons – A complete list", Daily Mail, 21 August 2002. Retrieved on 4 August 2012. 
  65. "Rasuwa peak named after Baden Powell". The Himalayan Times. Retrieved 4 August 2012
  66. London Gazette, 12 September 1876
  67. London Gazette, 17 September 1878
  68. London Gazette, 15 January 1884
  69. London Gazette, 12 July 1892
  70. London Gazette, 31 March 1896
  71. London Gazette, 30 April 1897
  72. London Gazette, 7 May 1897
  73. London Gazette, 22 May 1900
  74. London Gazette, 11 June 1907
  75. Template:LondonGazette
  76. London Gazette, 9 November 1909
  77. London Gazette, 1 January 1923
  78. London Gazette, 12 October 1909
  79. London Gazette, 24 May 1912
  80. London Gazette, 1 January 1921
  81. London Gazette, 23 February 1923
  82. London Gazette, 3 June 1927
  83. London Gazette, 20 September 1929
  84. London Gazette, 11 May 1937
  85. London Gazette, 7 October 1919
  86. London Gazette, 22 October 1920
  87. London Gazette, 11 October 1921

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