Page 65 - br-may-2020
P. 65

May 2020                              May 2020
       EARLY DAYS OF SCOUTING IN BERE REGIS




       Despite being in lockdown, some of our 80 or so youngsters have managed to do
       some Scouting activities at home, many of them counting towards their badges
       which  form  the  framework  of  the  Scout  training  programme.  Our  Chief  Scout,
       Bear Grylls, has produced a list of 100 activities that Scouts of all ages could try
       out at home.

       A few intrepid souls, including our Group Scout Leader,Neal, took part in a virtual,
       lockdown  camp  over  the  Easter  weekend.  Some  bivouacked  in  their  gardens
       and  cooked  breakfast  outdoors,  some  of  the  younger  Beavers  ‘camped’  in
       conservatories, etc. Hopefully we will get back to ‘normal’ scouting before very
       long.
       As  a  result  we  have  very  little  Section  news  so  we  thought  readers  might  be
       interested  in  an  article  based  on  a  talk  that  was  delivered  in  2014  during  the
       church service at Bere Regis to commemorate the Centenary of the founding of
       the Bere Regis Scout Group.
       Scouting,  of  course,  had  its  beginnings  in  Dorset,  when  General  Baden  Powell
       held an experimental camp on Brownsea in August 1907 for 20 young boys from
       different social backgrounds. From that camp grew what is now the largest youth
       organisation  in  the  world  with  an  estimated  58  million  members  in  all  but  6
       countries of the world and 639,000 members in the UK.

       Bere Regis Scout Group is amongst the earliest of the Scout Troops formed after
       Baden Powell’s first camp . The Parish Magazine in January 1914 recorded that a
       Boy  Scout  Troop  (Scouting  was  for  boys  only  in  those  early  days)  had  been
       formed  thanks  to  the  generosity  and  hard  work  of  Mr  and  Mrs  L  E  Gaunt  who
       partly financed the start-up of the Troop. It is likely that many of the village families
       couldn’t afford the uniforms and they were provided for the boys (and withdrawn
       for poor attendance). Many of the early Troops at that time had to be similarly
       subsidised.

        Mr H  (Bertie) Jesty was the first Scoutmaster  (as they were known at that time)
       with Mrs Bere, the wife of the Vicar, the Reverend Montague Bere, as the assistant
       Scoutmistress.  Bertie  was  a  farming  member  of  the  Jesty  family  living  at  Roke
       Farm.
       The first recorded event was on Sunday 11 January when the Troop paraded from
       the  Drax  Hall  to  Shitterton  and  back  carrying  a  large  banner  proclaiming  who
       they  were.    They  were  entertained  to  tea  and  cakes  in  the  Vicarage  before
       attending evensong. On 12 February 1914 the Troop attended the christening of
       Sir Robert and Lady Baden-Powell’s son, Peter, at Parkstone Parish Church. Bere
       Regis was one of some 17 Troops which attended the christening and together
       formed a Guard-of-Honour of some 300 scouts from Dorset. A photograph of the

 36                                          65
   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70