In July / August 1929 Dad, then aged 22, went to see the Boy Scouts Jamboree held at Arrowe Park on the Wirral, Cheshire. Fifty thousand scouts, representing the youth of 43 nations camped on the park with overspill sites at Overchurch and Upton for an additional 10,000 British scouts. It was the largest ever gathering of international youth to date. Atrocious weather turned the ground in a quagmire but didn’t seem to dampen the spirits too much. Miles of railway sleepers and fencing had to be laid down as pathways. It also didn’t stop Dad from taking photos.
Some of the Polish contingent
The United States contingent laid on a Sioux wardance for the Prince – ‘complete with warpaint and feathers’- and presented Birkenhead with a totem pole.
Scouts from Finland
Almost continuous entertainment was provided as the youths sang their native songs and laid on plays for their fellow scouts.Sudan on the march
The Bengalese contingent marching.
The event ended with a march past.
A French Scout
There was much talk of world peace among that great league of nations at Arrowe Park and at the end Lord Baden Powell, hatchet in hand, announced: "Here is the hatchet of war, of enmity, of bad feeling, which I now bury in Arrowe." He then drove the hatchet into a barrel of arrows. Ironically, ten years later, many of those youngsters would be involved in fighting World War II.
Which is sad, and just goes to prove that the more things change the more they stay the same! Yet I do believe we have to keep trying, keep working for peace, keep hoping for it. Maybe someday we'll actually get some! One can only hope ...
ReplyDeleteCanadian Chickadee
Great pictures. Once in my life (at the age of 11) I went on a girl scouts camp. Not quite as big as the one you're describing. In my case, rain turning the ground into a quagmire DID dampen my spirits a good deal. I was never tempted to repeat the experience. My few photos from the event are incredibly blurry, but my inner memories are quite clear! ;)
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