Robert Baden-Powell

views updated May 29 2018

Robert Baden-Powell

Robert Baden-Powell (1857-1941) was a military officer who helped protect Britain's imperial empire for over 30 years. He was especially talented in military scouting. Baden-Powell was a prolific writer who often chose his military experiences as the subjects of his works. He is best known for starting a worldwide scouting movement.

Robert Baden-Powell was born Robert Stephenson Smyth Powell on February 22, 1857 in his parents' house in London, England. His father, Professor H.G. Baden Powell was a vicar and a professor of natural science. His mother, Henrietta Smyth, was Professor Baden Powell's third wife. The couple had seven living children together, of whom Robert was the fifth, and they also raised three children from the vicar's previous marriage. Baden-Powell's father died just after his last child was born, when Robert was only three years old. In 1869 Henrietta changed the family name to Baden-Powell out of respect for her late husband.

Mrs. Baden-Powell educated her children in the outdoors. Through long walks in the country, she taught them about plants and animals. They were also allowed to read books from their father's collection on natural history. Baden-Powell's formal education started with a Dame's School in Kensington Square. In 1868 he attended the Rose Hill School in Tunbridge Wells, where his father was also educated. Two years later he won a scholarship to the Charterhouse School in London. In 1872 the school moved to Godalming, which was surrounded by woodlands known as "The Copse." The wilderness was an important part of Baden-Powell's childhood experience. As a schoolboy, he did not excel either academically or athletically. He was mainly interested in the outdoors and theater.

Joined the Army

By 1876 Baden-Powell had to decide upon a career. He was denied admittance to Balliol College in Oxford, where two of his older brothers had attended. Without much forethought, Baden-Powell decided to participate in an open examination for an army commission. Of the 700 people who took the exam, he finished second for cavalry and fourth for infantry. On September 11, 1876 Baden-Powell became a sub-lieutenant in the thirteenth Hussars. On December 6 of the same year, he joined his regiment in Bombay, India.

Baden-Powell took his new profession seriously and excelled in the military. He became a captain at the young age of 26. In 1884 his regiment returned to England for two years. During this time he published a book called Reconnaissance and Scouting. He also worked as a spy, traveling to Germany, Austria, and Russia to learn about their latest technological and military advances. In 1887 Baden-Powell's uncle, General Henry Smyth, was appointed governor and commander-in-chief of South Africa. He asked his nephew to be part of his staff. Baden-Powell participated in several non-combative missions with the Zulu and, in recognition, was promoted to brevet-major. In 1889 General Sir Henry Smyth was sent to Malta as governor and commander-in-chief and he again took his nephew as part of his staff. However, Baden-Powell was anxious for combat and, therefore, resigned from his position as military secretary in Malta in 1893 and rejoined the thirteenth Hussars in Ireland.

In 1895 Baden-Powell was sent to command a campaign against the Ashanti, whose king had broken British treaties. He thought he would have an opportunity for military action, but in the end there was no fighting. Due to his success on this mission he was promoted to brevet-lieutenant-colonel at the age of 39. Despite the honor of the promotion, Baden-Powell was disappointed that he had not yet had any combat experience in the military. He thought this was the key to having his own command in Africa. Based on his experiences with the Ashanti, Baden-Powell published a book called The Downfall of Prempeh in 1896. In 1889 he wrote his next book called Pigsticking or Hog Hunting about boar hunting.

Baden-Powell was next sent to deal with the Matabele Rebellion in the African nation of Rhodesia, as the chief of staff of Major-General Sir Frederick Carrington. Since there was not a corps of scouts available for this mission, Baden-Powell conducted his own scouting trips to learn about the terrain and the people. He would later publish his experiences in a book called The Matabele Campaign. Baden-Powell cited the adventure as a crucial learning experience in the ways of scouting.

After returning home from Africa, Baden-Powell was offered command of the Fifth Dragoon Guards back in India. He dedicated much of his position to training the troops in tracking and surveillance techniques. In 1899 he published Aids to Scouting, which was intended for the military, but had also gained surprising interest among the general public. In the same year, the commander-in-chief of the British army sent Baden-Powell back to South Africa to deal with an expected war between the British and the Boers.

Became a Hero

The Boer War was a bloody struggle between English-speaking and Afrikaans-speaking whites for control of South Africa's mineral wealth—the world's richest gold reefs. While the chief of the British army, Lord Wolseley, wanted to send 10,000 troops to South Africa, the British cabinet disagreed and instead sent 20 special service officers to organize a defense of the frontiers, one of whom was Baden-Powell. He was assigned to raise a small regiment to protect Rhodesia and to deceive the Boers into thinking that more British forces were on the way. The Boers surrounded Baden-Powell and his men in Mafeking, a small town about 175 miles west of Johannesburg. Baden-Powell managed to defend the town against over 7,000 Boers for 217 days. Some viewed this as the first real victory for the British against the Boers and Baden-Powell was considered a hero.

Mafeking was an important experience for Baden-Powell in two respects. First, he finally experienced real military action that he had desired for so long. The experience also gave him the respect of the military he was looking for and the recognition as a leader. He was promoted to the rank of major general because of his success with this mission. Second, Mafeking was the beginning of Baden-Powell's idea for boy scouts. Because the men were busy protecting the city, Baden-Powell organized the boys into a Mafeking Cadet Corps to take care of the smaller tasks around town. Mafeking became the subject of a 1907 book by Baden-Powell called Sketches in Mafeking and East Africa. In 1900 Baden-Powell was appointed head of the newly created South African Constabulary, a military police force, for three years. He was named inspector general of the cavalry from 1903 until 1907.

Founded Scouting

It was during this last appointment that Baden-Powell really began to develop his ideas about the scouting movement. In 1904 he attended the Annual Drill Inspection and Review of the Boys Brigade in Glasgow, where the founder, William Smith, had recruited over 54,000 boys. Smith had asked Baden-Powell to rewrite his book Aids to Scouting for a younger audience. According to Michael Rosenthal in The Character Factory, this gave Baden-Powell "the vision of a British society made strong by legions of well-disciplined, morally upright, patriotic youth who found their satisfaction in defending the interests of the empire and following the orders of their superiors."

Since Baden-Powell was still occupied as inspector general of the cavalry, it took a few years to put his ideas into action. In 1906 he wrote a short paper called "Scouting for Boys," where he put some of his ideas into print. His vision for scouting was strongly influenced by three of his contemporaries, William Smith, Ernest Thompson Seton, and Dan Beard. Seton and Beard had started similar youth organizations in the United States. This small paper turned into a six-part series called Scouting for Boys, which was published between January and March of 1908. The series included the first publication of the Scout Oath and Scout Law. This series then led to an official weekly magazine, called The Scout, which increased the visibility and appeal of the scouting movement in the public's eye.

In the summer of 1907 Baden-Powell acted upon his ideas and ran a demonstration camp for boys on Brownsea Island off the coast of Dorset. Twenty-two boys, from ages 10 to 17, took part in the weeklong exercise, which consisted of camping, cooking, tracking, singing, and storytelling. This was the beginning of what was called "unquestionably the most significant youth movement of the twentieth century " in Michael Rosenthal's The Character Factory.

Created an International Movement

In 1910 Baden-Powell resigned from the Army and became the chairperson of the Executing Committee of the scouting movement. This movement quickly spread to other countries. Baden-Powell traveled extensively to promote scouting, including trips to South America, Russia, Canada, and the West Indies. Interest in the movement was not limited to boys. By 1910 over 8,000 girls had registered with the scouts. Baden-Powell convinced his sister, Agnes Baden-Powell, to organize the girls into their own movement, which he called the Girl Guides. In 1912 Robert and Agnes Baden-Powell published the Handbook for Girl Guides. In the same year, the Boy Scout Association was granted a charter of incorporation.

In 1912 Baden-Powell met his future wife, Olave St. Clair Soames, on a voyage to the West Indies. The couple was married on October 30, 1912 and went on to have three children together: Peter (1913), Heather (1915), and Betty (1917). His wife was a strong supporter of the continuing development of the scouting movement.

In 1914 Baden-Powell created the Wolf Cubs for younger boys aged 9 to 12. During World War I he published several books including Quick Training for War, The Adventures of a Spy, Young Knights of the Empire, and The Wolf Cub's Handbook. After the war he created a third group of scouts for older boys (over the age of 16) called the Rover Scouts. In 1920 Baden-Powell organized the first International Jamboree in London. He wanted a special event to celebrate the tenth anniversary of scouting. According to Tim Jeal in the book Baden-Powell, the chief scout wrote that the goal of the Jamboree was "to make our ideals and methods more widely known abroad; to promote the spirit of brotherhood among the rising generation throughout the world, thereby giving the spirit that is necessary to make the League of Nations a living force."

Baden-Powell spent the later years of his life travelling and supporting the movement. He continued to write throughout his life with such books as Birds and Beasts in Africa (1938), Paddle Your Own Canoe (1939), and More Sketches of Kenya (1940). Baden-Powell died on January 8, 1941 and was buried at Nyeri in view of Mount Kenya.

The legacy of Baden-Powell lies in the popularity of the scouting movement throughout the world. However, its founder has also faced his share of criticism. In 1999 Baden-Powell's character came under attack when the Barolong-Boora-Tshidi Tribal Authority of South Africa sued the British government for millions of dollars in compensation for his alleged mistreatment of blacks during the Mafeking Siege. Despite this problem, the scouting movement has continued to grow. By the year 2000 there were over 25 million members in more than 216 countries.

Books

Jeal, Tim, Baden-Powell, Century Hutchinson, Ltd., 1989.

Mac Donald, Robert H. Sons of the Empire: The Frontier and the Boy Scout Movement, 1890-1918, University of Toronto Press, 1993.

Plaatje, Sol T., Mafeking Diary: A Black Man's View of a White Man's War, Meridor Books, 1990.

Reynolds, E.E., A Biography of Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell, Oxford University Press, 1943.

Rosenthal, Michael, The Character Factory: Baden-Powell and the Origins of the Boy Scout Movement, Pantheon Books, 1986.

Saunders, Frederick Mafeking Memories, Associated University Presses, Inc., 1996.

Periodicals

Guardian, July 24, 1999, p. 1.

Independent, October 21, 1989.

Los Angeles Times, July 24, 1999, p. 1.

New Republic, September 29, 1986, p. 33.

Ottawa Citizen, October 11, 1999, p. A7.

San Diego Union-Tribune, February 20, 2000, p. G-1.

Smithsonian, July 1985, p. 33.

Sunday Telegraph, October 10, 1999, p. 33.

U.S. News and World Report, January 14, 1991, p. 50.

Online

"Founders of Scouting and the Boy Scouts of America," http://www.scouting.org/factsheets/02-211.html(December 6, 2000).

"Historical Highlights," http://www.scouting.org/factsheets/02-511/1910.html(December 6, 2000).

"History of Scouting," http://www.scoutbase.org.uk/library/books/history/index.html(December 25, 2000).

"Sir Robert Baden-Powell," http://users/aol.com/randywoo/bsahis/b-p.html(December 25, 2000).

"Scouting Archives," http://www.scoutingarchives.com(December 25, 2000).

"Scouting Is …," http://www.www.scout.org/wso/scoutis.html(December 25, 2000). □

Baden-Powell, Robert (1857-1941)

views updated May 18 2018

Baden-Powell, Robert (1857-1941)


Robert Baden-Powell created the Boy Scouts which grew rapidly into an international educational youth movement before 1914. He wrote Scouting for Boys in 1908, and also coauthored the Girl Guides manual, How Girls Can Help Build Up the Empire, with his sister Agnes in 1910.

The Boy Scout scheme was a system of character development and citizenship training that, while based on a manual of military scouting, was firmly grounded in both contemporary psychological theory and educational methods. The aim was to create model adolescents and ultimately model adult citizens through Boy Scout trainingcomplete with its own moral code (encapsulated in the Scout Promise and Scout Law)and by its public service roles in ambulance, fire fighting, and lifesaving. Boy Scouts were to be replete with the skills and virtues of backwoodsmen and frontiersmen by taking a whole series of scout tests such as cooking without utensils, shelter building, and knots and lashings.

Scouting was designed as an "all-embracing game" by Baden-Powell to be pursued all year round both indoors and out, that contrived to mold boys' character and moral values. For younger boys scouting could provide an adult-inspired "escape" from the suffocating domestic conventions of childhood combined nonetheless with custodial supervision. For fourteen year olds it was intended as a diversion from adult recreational forms (notably smoking and gambling) widely adopted by precocious school leavers in Edwardian Britain.

Major-General Baden-Powell, the Boer War's "hero of Mafeking," had an upbringing with a Progressive educationalist mother. Following public school Baden-Powell did so well in the entrance exam that he bypassed officer training and went straight to his regiment. He was to prove an unconventional and unorthodox regular soldier who advocated the use of irregular volunteer forces and wrote the military manual Aids to Scouting subsequently adapted as the core theme for citizenship training in the Boy Scouts. Later Rud-yard Kipling's Jungle Book was used as the basis for his Wolf Cub program for boys below scout age.

Prior to the publication of Scouting for Boys, Baden-Powell developed scouting for the Boys Brigade at the invitation of its founder, W. A. Smith. Scouting then grew largely by being adopted by existing youth organizations like the Boys' Clubs, Sunday schools, and church choirs, who would establish a scout troop so as not to lose their members completely to the new fashionable movement.

Baden-Powell's concept of scouting was shaped by an eclectic blend of influences and ideas. He borrowed the idea of self-governing clubs from American Charles Stelzle, who helped operate boys' clubs starting in the 1880s; the scout's secret handshake and notion of a scout brotherhood came from Freemasonry; the Scouts Farm schools and emigration policy imitated the Salvation Army plan. Baden-Powell also drew heavily from Maria Montessori's ideas on play and G. Stanley Hall's biogenetic psychologyincluding the idea that children recapitulated the cultural history of the race in their development and play as they grew up. Accordingly, the Wolf Cub program was designed for those in Hall's "Savage or Barbaric stage" and the Boy Scouts, for those over ten years in the "Tribal or Clan stage." The sixboy Scout Patrol was meant as a "fraternity gang." Maria Montessori greatly admired the Scout movement and saw it as an invaluable preparation for "going out."

Despite being a product of Edwardian England's intellectual and cultural climate and its socioeconomic preoccupations, scouting had widespread appeal and proved equally applicable in many diverse national contexts. By 1914 it had spread to fifty-two other countries, dominions, and colonies including France, Germany, Austria, Japan, Russia, the United States, Peru, Australia, and Canada. Baden-Powell actively encouraged this by making a six-month world tour to promote his brain child in 1912. In 1918 there were 750,000 Boy Scouts overseas and 155,000 in Britain.

Scouting has been modified and kept up to date since then (for example, the Beavers were started for the preWolf Cub age group) and the uniform altered to accommodate changes in fashion (short trousers were abandoned). Nevertheless, the Scout movement's aims, objectives, and most of its activities are fundamentally the same at the start of the twenty-first century as they were in 1908.

See also: Boyhood; Child Development, History of the Concept of; Girl Scouts.

bibliography

Aitkin, W. Francis. 1900. Baden-Powell, the Hero of Mafeking. London: S. W. Partridge and Co.

Dedman, Martin J. 1993. "Baden-Powell, Militarism and the 'Invisible Contributors' to the Boy Scout Scheme 1904-1920" Twentieth Century British History 4, no. 3: 201-23.

Martin J. Dedman

Baden-Powell, Robert

views updated May 23 2018

BADEN-POWELL, ROBERT

BADEN-POWELL, ROBERT (1857–1941), British army officer and founder of the Boy Scout and Girl Guide movements.

Born in London on 22 February 1857, Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell was the sixth son of the polymath theologian, the Reverend Baden Powell (1796–1860). After failing the entrance examination for Oxford University, Baden-Powell successfully negotiated the army's tests and was posted as a lieutenant to a cavalry regiment in India in 1876. Following an uncertain start, his career began to flourish and he rose to the rank of lieutenant-colonel in 1897, after seeing service in India, Africa, Ireland, and the Mediterranean. He supplemented his army salary through writing, penning reports for national newspapers, and publishing a number of texts, including a handbook on Pig-Sticking or Hog Hunting (1889), a popular pastime among officers in India. Success at pig-sticking, he wrote, proved "our claim to superiority as a dominant race."

Baden-Powell won international fame during the second South African War (1899–1902) between British colonists and South African Boer farmers of Dutch origin. Appointed Commander-in-Chief of North-West forces in South Africa in July 1899, Baden-Powell withdrew his small contingent of troops to the frontier town of Mafeking (now Mafikeng). A large Boer force besieged the town for 217 days between October 1899 and May 1900. The announcement of the relief of Mafeking on 18 May proved one of the high points of popular imperialism in Britain before World War I, igniting frenzied celebrations in London and throughout the country. Baden-Powell won acclaim for his ingenious leadership during the siege, drawing on his passion for theatrical performance by laying false minefields and organizing entertainments to maintain morale. Some scholars, however, have criticized his record, highlighting a disastrous assault on a Boer outpost at the end of 1899 and the suffering of the town's black African population.

The conflict generated intense anxieties about national efficiency, imperial decline, and racial degeneration in Britain. On his return, Baden-Powell was appointed Inspector General of Cavalry and learned that Christian youth groups had been using the handbook of reconnaissance tips that he had completed just before the war, Aids to Scouting (1899). Baden-Powell took on the vice-presidency of the Boys' Brigade in 1903, and, inspired by the ideas of Ernest Thompson Seton (1860–1946), founder of the Woodcraft Indians in the United States, began to formulate his own plans to rejuvenate the nation's youth, countering the enervating effects of urban life with strenuous outdoor activity. Encouraged by newspaper magnate Sir Cyril Arthur Pearson (1866–1922), Baden-Powell held an experimental camp for twenty-two boys on Brownsea Island off the south coast of England in July 1907 and composed a new training manual, Scouting for Boys, which initially appeared in fort-nightly installments in January 1908 before the publication of a single volume in May. Scouting for Boys was an eclectic collection of scout rules, stories, games, and practical advice. The book expressed a range of historical and literary influences, from the myth of King Arthur to the writings of Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936), mixing the public school games ethic, Victorian ideas of self-help, an ecumenical Christianity, and imperial patriotism.

The combination of tips on scoutcraft, from tracking horses to tying knots, with uniforms, songs, and rituals, proved highly attractive. Scout troops sprang up throughout the country and in 1908 Baden-Powell was forced, somewhat reluctantly, to establish his own organization, the Boy Scouts. By 1910, when Baden-Powell retired from the army, there were already estimated to be over 100,000 scouts in Britain. Demand led to the publication of a handbook for girls in 1912, the year in which Baden-Powell married Olave St. Clair Soames (1889–1977), who would play an increasingly prominent role in the Girl Guides Association founded in 1915. The movements grew rapidly and Baden-Powell was proclaimed "chief scout of the world" at the first international "jamboree" in London in 1920. The ethos he had sketched out proved adaptable, shifting away from military training after the war, to a more pacific emphasis on good citizenship.

Almost every race, every kind of man, black, white, or yellow, in the world furnishes subjects of King Edward VII.

This vast empire did not grow of itself out of nothing; it was made by your forefathers by dint of hard work and hard fighting, at the sacrifice of their lives—that is, by their hearty patriotism.

Robert Baden-Powell, Scouting for Boys (2004 [1908]), p. 26.

By 1939, membership of the scout and guide movements had reached five million, while Scouting for Boys was estimated to have sold more copies than any other book published in English between the wars except the Bible. Baden-Powell died peacefully at his Kenyan bungalow on 8 January 1941, survived by his wife, two daughters, and one son. Sensational accusations of imperial cruelty and repressed homosexuality have kept Baden-Powell in the public eye in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Historians continue to debate the balance between militaristic indoctrination and benign self-improvement within the early scouting movement, reflecting tensions and ambiguities in Baden-Powell's own writings.

See alsoChildhood and Children; Citizenship; Imperialism.

bibliography

Baden-Powell, Robert. Scouting for Boys: A Handbook for Instruction in Good Citizenship. London, 1908. Reprint, Oxford, U.K., 2004.

Jeal, Timothy. Baden-Powell. New Haven, Conn., 2001.

Max Jones

Baden-Powell, Robert

views updated May 21 2018

Baden-Powell, Robert (1857–1941). Founder of the Boy Scouts. Baden-Powell joined the army in 1876 and specialized in reconnaissance and scouting. In 1897 he was appointed to command the 5th Dragoon Guards stationed in India. He used the opportunity to develop scouting training methods based on powers of observation, deduction, and initiative. He explained his methods in Aids to Scouting (1899). During the Boer War he took part in the defence of Mafeking. His improvisation and organization helped the British to hold out for 217 days against overwhelming forces. Mafeking was relieved on 17 May 1900 to wild rejoicing in London and Baden-Powell returned to England a popular hero. He was made inspector-general of the cavalry in 1903 and from 1908 held a post with the Territorials. He retired from the army in 1910 to devote his energies to the Boy Scout movement he had founded several years earlier. He was awarded the OM in 1937.

Richard A. Smith

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