n 1933, seemingly unrelated distant events were unfolding. The German
Nazi party was elected into power in the Weimar Republic that year. This was
followed a year later by the establishment of the Third Reich under Adolf
Hitler with earth-shattering consequences by the end of the decade. To the East,
the puppet-state of Manchukuo was celebrating its first anniversary, with the last
Qing emperor, Pu Yi, as its nominal head, while power effectively resided with
the Japanese who had captured Manchuria in 1932. The ensuing expansion of the
Japanese across East Asia is a history too well-known to be reiterated here. At
the risk of sounding highly specious, it appears that 1933 was a pivotal year
in the formation of new structures that were to significantly chart the course
of history. A "new order" was sweeping through the world in the early to mid
1930’s, and organisation structures of political entities were clearly affected.
Even in the arena of ideas, there was also a "new order" sweeping
through the world and Malaya. Since 1929, the Great Depression had seen massive
unemployment and economic slump - phenomena which prompted a revolution in economic
thought, as Michael Kalecki and John Maynard Keynes published their seminal works
in 1932 and 1936 respectively. Domestically, the administration of Malaya,
including the High Commissioner of the Federated Malay States from 1929, Sir Cecil
Clementi, (not to be confused with Sir Cecil Clementi Smith, Governor of the
Straits Settlements 1887-1890, and one of the founders of the V.I.) was embroiled
in heated debate on the merits of decentralisation. Whether locally or
internationally, people were thinking about new ways for solving their problems
and for carrying out their functions effectively and efficiently. After all, this
was what "new order" was supposed to achieve.
In the V.I., the Scouting movement underwent a momentous transformation
in 1933.
ORGANISING NEW TROOPS
As of 1932, the First Selangor Scout Troop was in early 1933 divided
into two sections, A and B, for ease of training. Cumbersome planning and activities would
have been the consequences of the burgeoning Troop, were it not for the decision
to partition it. DSM Mr Ganga Singh was placed in charge of section 1A with SM
Mr Lim Eng Thye as another Scout Master, while SM Mr Goh Keng Kwee helmed section
1B with SM Yoong Khee Hong as another Scout Master.
A historic decision that has since charted the course of the V.I.
Scouting movement was made in April 1933. At the suggestion of Mr H.R. Carey, the District
Commissioner (and later, the V.I. Headmaster in 1934), the Victoria Institution’s two
sections (of the same Troop) were formally split to form two separate Troops. Sections
A and B were renamed the First and Second Selangor Troops, with 40 Scouts in the First
Troop and 30 Scouts in the Second, and five Officers in total staffing both Troops. These
two Troops have been in continuous existence since then, except for a short hiatus
during the Second World War, when they continued to serve their homeland with pride.
More on that later.
So how were members distributed between the two Troops in 1933?
All Scouts of the First Troop had to pass the Second Class tests before they could
become members of the Troop. Thus, in policy, those with lesser qualifications (except
the leaders) such as the Second Class, Tenderfoot and recruits, belonged to the Second
Troop. In fact, with the exception of the Patrol Leaders and Patrol Seconds, practically
all the members of the Second Troop were recruits (those not having a Tenderfoot
badge) in 1933. Effectively, this meant that the First and Second Selangor Troops
were differentiated along the lines of badgework sequencing. However, this policy was
to change a few years later. Some time around 1935, the First and Second Selangor
Troops became Troops of equal standing so each had their share of higher qualified
Scouts (such as those with the First Class badge) and those new Scouts who had just
acquired their Tenderfoot badge. In fact, a decree was issued for both Troops by the
Courts of Honour in 1938 that the Scouts of both Troops should have the Second Class
badge, or at least be working towards it. Effectively, no recruit could become a
member of First and Second Selangor Troops. This was made possible by the establishment
of another Troop, called the Recruit Troop, in 1935.
Placed under the leadership of ASM Ghazally b. Ahmad, the Recruit
Troop was formed as an experiment. The Troop was to comprise of the boys from the V.I.
feeder schools who wished to become Scouts. The members of the Recruit Troop were not
strictly ‘fledgling’ members as some of them were already Scouts of their former
schools. In other words, the Recruit Troop also consisted of members who had gained
their Tenderfoot badge - the ‘non-recruits’. Nonetheless, the bulk of the Recruit
Troop’s work was indeed devoted to preparing its recruits for the Tenderfoot badge
while re-training other Scouts to re-familiarise them with the basics of Scouting
knowledge. What happened after training and gaining the Tenderfoot? These members
were then re-allocated into the First and Second Selangor Troops (where they
continued training for the Second Class and higher badges), a practice that was
terminated in 1939. From that year onwards, the Recruit Troop, belying its namesake,
operated as a full-fledged Troop, training its members not just for the Tenderfoot
but also for higher badges such as the Second Class badge. However, this independent
existence was short-lived. After the Second World War, nothing more was heard about
this Recruit Troop.
Democracy was practised in the running of the Troops. The yearly
Court of Honour (COH) which consisted of Patrol Leaders, would vote for the Troop Leader,
usually from among the previous year’s Patrol Leaders. It must be remembered that
before World War Two, there was no such distinction as Boy Scout and Senior Troops
in Malaya. Often the V.I. Troop Leader would be the most experienced or most
qualified among all the Scouts, evidenced by the length of his membership as a V.I.
Scout or his possession of a First Class and, many a time, the King Scout badge.
In the COH’s, responsibilities would be allocated for different sections of
administration. A typical categorisation of duties which was typical to both
First and Second Selangor, as occurred in 1940, was as follows:
- Troop log and register
- Troop subscriptions
- Scout equipment
- Camping materials
- Badge secretary
- Scout library
- Swimming captain
- Scout room
At the helm of the V.I. Troops, besides the COH’s, were the Scout
Masters. After the split occurred in 1933, SM Mr Lim Eng Thye took charge of the First
Selangor Troop while SM Yoong Khee Hoong was placed in charge of the Second
Selangor Troop, with newly promoted DSM Mr Goh Keng Kwee (formerly just an SM)
supervising and helping both Troops. Truly, continuity of service offers the benefit
of SM’s knowing their charges well and being familiar with the best training
techniques for the boys. Both SM Mr Lim and DSM Mr Goh epitomised such continuity,
serving the Scouts for a very long period. SM Mr Lim took the helm of First Selangor
from 1933 up until (and after) the Second World War, while Mr Goh Keng Kwee led
the Second Selangor (besides still overseeing all the V.I. Troops!) after
SM Yoong left for Batu Gajah in 1936. There were other Scout Masters who came and
went, such as SM Mr G.C. Tacchi who was placed in charge of the Recruit Troop in
1938 and DSM L. Lewis who assisted DSM Mr Goh in supervising all the V.I. Troops.
Particular mention needs to be made of a certain ADC Mr E.M.F. Payne, who like DSM
Lewis, helped DSM Mr Goh in overall supervision. ADC Mr Payne left for Malacca High
School in 1938, but no one knew then that he would subsequently rise to become the
Commissioner of Scouting in Malaya and, after the war, the Headmaster of the V.I.
SEPARATE BUT TOGETHER
The two V.I. Scout Troops have not always been mutually exclusive
of each other, and the twain DID meet on many occasions. As has been noted, the First
Selangor Troop was initially designated for First Class holders, while Second Selangor
for lesser badge holders. As such, it would have been necessary for periodic
re-allocations of members - those from Second Selangor who had gained the Second
Class would graduate into First Selangor, while some of those in First Selangor
with the First Class would be appointed as Patrol Leaders in Second Selangor. In
short, it is more accurate to think of both troops existing for chronological
placement rather than boys staying put in one Troop. Nonetheless, this need for
re-allocation ceased after the two Troops became Troops of equal standing, each
with its share of Second Class and First Class Scouts. In fact, some of the First
Class Scouts from both Troops were appointed as Patrol Leaders in the Recruit Troop
for purposes of training the recruits. In addition to this, there was a single Court
of Honour in charge of both the V.I. Troops. In short, inter-Troop competitiveness
was rather thin in those early days. Of course, this was not to deny that some
competitiveness did exist. Observe the Kellam Cup competition. Continuing the
tradition started in the mid 1920’s, the competition pitted the patrols of the V.I.
Troops in areas of Scouting proficiency. The elements judged varied from year to year.
For example, in 1938, the COH decided that the Kellam Cup was to be awarded to the
first Patrol whose members were all Second Class Scouts.
One major event which saw the V.I. Scouts co-operate very closely
was the Beamish Cup competition. This was a contest for the trophy donated by the
former DC Mr Beamish. The object of the award was to find the school with the greatest
number of smart and efficient Scouts, the total number of boys in the school and
the educational standard of the school being taken into consideration. On Monday
17 July 1933, the V.I. Scouts successfully defended the Beamish Cup won in the
previous year and in 1930, leaving the Kajang High School in second place, and
the M.B.S. in eighth. It was a day event but by no means were such things as
drill, badges and Scoutcraft displays the sheer result of overnight perspiration.
Rather, success required grinding at the mill all through the year; in other words,
success at that one day event could only be ensured by consistency of abilities.
Those who judged the competition were DC Mr H.R. Carey, Deputy Camp Chief for
Malaya A.R. Westrop, ADC M.A. Akbar and DSM T.R. Abraham. The V.I. Scouts gained
421 marks out of a possible total of 500 from the following categories:
- General Turn Out
- Troop and patrol drill
- First and Second Class Scouts and Badges
- Scout Room, Log Book and Patrol Book
- Percentage of Attendance
- Display (including typical campfire songs)
Arguably, the primary goal of the V.I. Scouts was not to emerge
numero uno among Scout Troops, but merely to live up to true Scouting ideals; in
other words, doing their best not for glory, but for the sake of Scouting itself.
Trying to win a competition merely means comparing oneself with others (even if
they are not the best role models), but trying to fulfil an absolute yardstick,
such as Scouting ideals, yields excellence that is timeless. Such must have been
what drove the V.I. Scouts to win the Beamish Cup again in 1934, 1935 and 1936.
Another inter-Troop competition was the DC’s Efficiency Banner,
which was presented by the DC Mr H.R. Carey for the first time in 1933. In that
inaugural year, 14 Scouts from both Troops represented the V.I. between 21 to 24
August at Castle Camp, Rifle Range Road (now Kem Kota Raya on Jalan Padang Tembak).
DSM Goh Keng Kwee was in charge. Unlike the Beamish Cup which was a day competition,
the Banner involved a camp where various Scoutcraft competitions were also held.
In the 1933 competition, the V.I. Scouts excelled themselves to win the Banner,
gaining 628 marks out of 800 from the following categories:
- Construction of bivouacs, huts etc
- Camp site and gadgets
- Inspection, uniform, cleanliness etc
- Knotting relay (4 scouts per team)
- Message relay (1 patrol of six)
- Trestle building (1 patrol of six)
- First aid (1 patrol of six)
- Tracking/ Sand track problem (2 PL’s only)
- Kim’s Game (2 Patrol Seconds only)
- Pop-gun questions (1 PL, 1 Second and 1 Tenderfoot)
- Estimation of heights, distances etc (TL)
- Semaphore signalling competition (4 stations)
- Chart and compass race (1 team of four)
They won the Efficiency Banner again in 1935. Without the strong
support of the V.I. Headmasters, many of the achievements of the V.I. Scouts would
not have materialised. For example, the V.I.’s participation in the 1933 Efficiency
Banner was in part due to Mr F.L. Shaw’s generosity in alloting to the Scouts
part of the proceeds from the School Concert organised by the V.I. Musical and
Dramatic Society. When Mr Shaw left the School in 1936, he received the ‘Thanks
Badge’ on 7 June, in recognition of his services to the Scout movement in the
V.I. and Selangor. Truly the Headmasters were very involved in Scouting activities.
The 1941 Victorian records that in a ceremony on 8 November, the Headmaster
presented badges won by the Scouts, and after the presentation congratulated the
Troops on another excellent year.
Besides the Headmasters, many other people were credited for the
achievements of the V.I. Troops. In the 1938 Victorian, the Scouts record the
appreciation to Mr G.C. Tacchi, Mr H.L. Barnett and several other gentlemen who put
forward the idea that fencing should be introduced among the V.I. Scouts. Fencing kits
- including foil, glove and mask - were bought by ten keen Scouts at $7.50 a set.
Under the eagle eye of Mr Barnett (and later Mr Grace from the Traffic Department),
who kindly spared his valuable time from 4.30 p.m. to 7.30 p.m. every Tuesday, the
Scouts practised their fencing. Results came quickly when the Scouts put up a
commendable fencing performance during the Scout Show in 1938. Deservingly, Mr
Barnett was presented with a 'Thanks Badge’ when he left for England at the end
of that year. Others who lent support to the Scouting movement included Old Boy
Dr Chua Boon Teck, who had been giving lectures on Ambulance work since the 1920’s,
and Mr Chia Chin Yam who coached the boys in swimming. In mentioning the help of
so many non-Scouts, one also should not forget the role of the wives of the Scout
Masters. Besides allowing their husbands to devote so much of their time to
Scouting, these wives also occasionally contributed their talents, such as Mrs
Goh Keng Kwee, who was recorded as preparing food for a Second Class Camp organised
by the First Selangor Troop during the Easter of 1939.
A KNOT AROUND THE HANDKERCHIEF
Lord Baden Powell, in Scouting For Boys, suggested that
each Scout tie a reef knot on his handkerchief or Scout scarf to remind him to perform
at least one good turn every day. But such reminders were unnecessary for the V.I.
Scouts who were glad to perform more than the ‘recommended’ share of good turns.
Thus, community service abounded:
Most events seemed to have taken place during the middle of the year.
As well, 1940 and 1941 saw a decrease in community service activities as the country
started oiling its machinery in preparation for war. Thus, public functions (at
which the Scout would have served) were reduced. Instead, the Scouts found much
of their time devoted to ‘war-related’ activities such as ambulance work,
fund-raising for British war efforts, enlisting in reserves and other services.
In 1941, newspaper collecting, carried out fortnightly, helped raise about $60
which was handed over to the Patriotic Fund for the comfort of people in blitzed
areas in Britain. Towards the end of that year, the V.I. Troops were the only ones
doing this good work!
"A Heroic Act" was the title of a report in the 1940 Victorian
on a quiet and unassuming Second Selangor Patrol Leader and First Class Scout, S.
Sockanathan, who became "the envy of all Scouts throughout Malaya". Quoting the
Malaya Tribune of 12 November 1940, it reported that he was returning home
from work when he saw a crowd looking down into the Klang River at two boys, ages
between seven and eight, who were struggling in the river near Sulaiman Bridge.
Without hesitation, Sockanathan jumped into the river and managed to pull one ashore.
But the other boy was carried away by the strong current. Sockanathan swam towards him
and amid cheers from the crowd, got him (not without trouble) safely to land. In this
excellent "Good Turn", Sockanathan had risked his life to save others.
BADGEWORK AND PROFICIENCY TESTS
Troop parades were held twice a week. Initially held on Saturdays
(from 8.15 a.m.) and Mondays (4.15 p.m.), towards the end of the 1930’s, the parades
were later held on Saturdays and Wednesdays for all the V.I. Troops. Attendance for
each parade ranged from 75% to 90% of total membership, which in 1940, stood at around
35 members for each Troop. This compelled the Scout Masters to continue the
tradition of Defaulters’ Parades for absentees, initiated in the late 1920’s.
One will observe that the Scouting activities of the epoch revolved around
badgework, whether progressive (Tenderfoot, Second Class, First Class and King
Scout) or proficiency, which can be seen from the following sample programme of
Troop weekly parades for the First term of 1935:
First Week
- Troop and patrol drill. Silent signals. (10 minutes)
- Scout signs and patrol formation. (10 minutes)
- Give a few words about the salute. (15 minutes)
- Knots, whipping. Reef, and One round turn and two half hitches. (15 minutes)
- ‘Follow the trail’ game. (40 minutes)
Second Week
- Troop and patrol drill. Silent signals. (10 minutes)
- Written test on the signs. (5 minutes)
- Revise knots. (5 minutes) Boys must bring cords.
- Learn Clove hitch and Sheepshank. (15 minutes). Use the method of
finding the slowest.
- Talk on the Union Jack. (10 minutes)
- Wool-gathering game (Fire lighting at the end of the game). (45 minutes).
On the way home, practise the Scout pace.
Third Week
- Drill continued. "O'Grady Says" game. (10 minutes)
- Written test on salutes. (10 minutes)
- Practise saluting. Patrol leaders in charge. (10 minutes)
- Revision of knots already learnt. (15 minutes)
- Teach Bowline and Sheet bend. (15 minutes)
- The flag. Its history and composition. How it is flown etc.
- Game a) Baiting the badger, b) Storming the forest (First Aid box in
readiness)
Fourth Week
- Drill continued. "O'Grady Says" Game. (10 minutes)
- Written test on the flag. (15 minutes)
- Revise the whole of the six knots. (20 minutes). (Knotting game and
competition)
- Explain the Scout law and motto.
- Test fire-lighting by Troop Leaders. Each boy to find his own materials,
not dry bundles of wood from home.
- Test Scout pace for Second Class. Boys who want to learn Scout pace are
to follow those who are taking the test.
Fifth Week
- Silent signals and drill continued (10 minutes) to be taken by the DSM.
- Written test on Scout law (Examiner, Mr E.H. Bromley). (15 minutes)
- Test on knots. (10 minutes)
- Outdoor. "Spot your staves". (Use wool, Scout signs and knots).
- To finish at the Cemetery. There to pass fire-lighting and cooking.
(Scouts are to bring their own materials)
Sixth Week
- Drill with staves and silent signals continued. (10 minutes)
- Signalling. Scouts to practise for 10 minutes regularly at home.
Semaphore flag measurements - two square feet, black ad white if possible.
Pole 3’ 6" long (made of bamboo or rattan). Home made materials are better.
- Signalling game. (10 minutes)
- Scouts to write out in block capitals the letters signalled by the SM.
(10 minutes)
- Practise Scout chorus, Scout rally and Scout call. (15 minutes)
- Practise enrolment ceremony.
- Learn to move in patrol formation. (10 minutes)
- "Flag raiding" - First Selangor versus the rest.
Other years were not much different in terms of the focus of
activities. Emphasis was placed on the acquisition of Scouting skills and thus,
much instruction and training was given for progressive and proficiency tests.
Proficiency badges included First Aid, Ambulance Man, Cyclist, Interpreter,
Swimmer, Athlete, Entertainer, Camper, Healthy Man, Reader, Rescuer, Artist,
Gardener, Pathfinder, Pioneer, Cook, Signalling, Estimation of Heights and
Distances, Starman, Stalker or Tracker. Such training was made possible by the
availability of qualified instructors and good facilities. Both DSM Goh Keng Kwee
and SM Lim Eng Thye were members of the St John’s Ambulance Service, most
advantageous for First Aid training. As well, the First Class Scouts also had a
large role in training and passing the Tenderfoots; surely passing on knowledge
from the seniors to the juniors has always been a V.I. characteristic!
The existence of facilities was another factor that contributed to
a high level of skills. For instance, the Troops were fortunate to have ‘scientific’
Scouters in ADC Mr Payne and SM Mr Lim Eng Thye, who rigged up a Signalling set in
the Scout Room for Scouts to practise their skills after School hours. Also, the
Scouts made full use of Swimming facilities put at their disposal. Before the
V.I. pool was built in 1938, they swam in the pool near Travers Road, thanks to
the permission of the Inspector of Schools. When the V.I. pool was built, the
Scouts were given the privilege of using it first, for some unrecorded reason.
Such a facility was used to its utmost and coupled with training by skilled people
such a Mr Chia Chin Yam, the Scouts mastered the strokes quickly. The results were
clear - in 1941, the V.I. Scouts easily defeated the 10th and 15th Scout Troops
(from M.B.S.) in a friendly competition.
This is not to say that all Scout parades were only about test-taking.
Indeed, there was a lengthy remonstration of the phenomenon of ‘badge-hunting’
that appeared in the December 1940 edition of the Victorian. It was written by
the Troop Secretary of the Second Selangor Troop, Yong Pung How. He
said "...there were some scouts from the lower classes who showed great
tendencies to be what is known among scouts as ‘badge-hunters’. ‘Badge-hunting’
may be all right in that scouts, by bluffing or by learning by rote facts from
Scouting for Boys, Boy Scout Tests, and other manuals, can gain
red and white All-Round Cords and can display showers of badges to gaping admirers.
But the spirit of scouting is lost. It is indeed disappointing to see such
a view being taken in this troop and all not above reproach in this matter should
learn more about the aims of the movement...". Before alarms start ringing
and the reader gets an impression that badgework is completely repugnant to
Scouting, perhaps a comment is in order. Pung How’s comment referred to the
disagreeableness of the method of badge-taking, not the idea of badge-taking
in itself. Scouts should aim for badges, but in a way that helps them internalise
(as opposed to rote-learn) Scouting skills and Scouting ideals. They should not
ignore the forest for the trees. Yong Pung How himself was well-decorated, having
earned the First Class badge and also becoming a PL. Today, he is the Chief
Justice of Singapore, the highest judicial officer of the land. (See
A Gallery of Scouting Greats.) One of Yong Pung How's
contemporaries in the Second Selangor Troop was Siew Nim Chee, later to become the
Chief Economist of Bank Negara Malaysia. (See A Gallery
of Scouting Greats.)
As a result of the rigorous training in badgework, many badges were
won by the V.I. Scouts. Unfortunately, due to the lack of detail in reports, many names
have been lost to posterity, and what follows is but a small number of names out of
the many who had gained the highest badges in Scouting in the 1930’s - the First
Class and King Scout badges. In 1936, there were six new First Class Scouts namely
Tan Chin Guan, Yahya b. Sa’at, Ismail b. Mohd Ali (See A
Gallery of Scouting Greats), Shakhar, Ng Khiew Yin and Wong Kim Seong. A few
years later, those who passed their First Class badges included Foo Chee Wee,
Dahalan b. Said, Rodney Lam, S. Sivanason, Abdul Aziz b. Mohd Ali, Abdul Majid b.
Ismail (See A Gallery of Scouting Greats), Mohd Noor
b. Marahakim, Chin Thian Tsiew, Lam Siew Weng, Keshmahinder Singh (See
A Gallery of Scouting Greats) and Chin Thiam Tsiew.
In 1940 and 1941, the First Class Scouts included Teoh Seng Chuan, Chang Sow Khong,
Lye Siew Kuan, C. Ganasalingam (later a V.I. teacher), Mah Sin Kheong, Yap Pow Kong,
Chia Nyit Yin, Cheong Cheng Leong, Tang Peng Choy, Fong Ying Tuck, Rudolph T. Lam,
Choon Thiem Fatt, Yong Pung How, Chai Fook Loong, Ibrahim Abdullah, Tan Cheng Hock,
Abdul Ghani, Lim Chooi Seng, Fong Chu Chai, Hooi Cheng Kwok and Mah Kee Soo. The King
Scouts between 1933 and 1941 included Ismail b. Mohd Ali (1936), Yahya b. Sa’at (c.
1936-1938), Ahmad Ghazalli b. Haji Kassim (c. 1937-39), Mohd Noor b. Marahakim (1939),
Chai Fook Loong (1941), Hooi Cheng Kwok (1941) and Mah Kee Soo (1941).
MORE ACTIVITIES
On Saturday 17 October 1933, the Officers (Scouters) and PL’s of both
Troops went on a twelve mile hike. This journey was undertaken to familiarise the Scouts
with a typical route of a First Class Journey - the Scouts being taught to draw maps,
use the compass and read a surveyor’s map en route. Starting from DSM Goh Keng
Kwee’s house, the party proceeded to the north bank of the Klang river via Ceylon
Lane (now Lorong Ceylon), Treacher Road (now Jalan Sultan Ismail), Yap Kwan Seng Road
and Circular Road (now Jalan Tun Razak). Then they followed the river upstream
until they came to the power line near Ampang. From Ampang, they turned right,
following the power line until they came to a farmer’s hut when rain fell. Out of
the kindness of the farmer and his wife, the party was able to use his hut to cook
their food. After the meal, they continued the journey, passing through mining lands,
estates, the Selangor Golf Links and finally arriving at the starting point at 7 pm.
There were also other outings, such as to the Bukit Nanas Forest Reserve on Saturday
19 February 1938. In the wide-game they had there, the Scouts had fun finding a
‘lost article’ and ‘killing each other with a look’. Other favourite destinations
for outings included the Ulu Kanching waterfall and Castle Camp (now Kem Kota Raya).
For the outing to Kanching on 2 October 1938, the party which consisted of 18 Scouts
and the SM cycled their way there (while DC Mr E.M.F. Payne of Malacca and TL Yahya
went by car). The journey took two hours. At the waterfalls, they frolicked in the
water, prepared and had lunch, practised their Morse code and signalling, and had
afternoon tea. They left Kanching at 4.30 pm.
There were frequent camps - usually one or two per term but sometimes
monthly - around Kuala Lumpur, held at places such as Castle Camp, which essentially
focussed on improving Scoutcraft. Usual activities at those camps included ‘pop-gun
questions’, knotting, compass work, signalling and First Aid. There were also
occasional hikes, such as a hike to Hawthornden Estate by the Second Selangor
Scouts on the morning of Sunday 21 May 1939, the last day of a three day Troop camp.
Nonetheless, all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, and the Scouts realised
this and so interspersed the learning of Scoutcraft with more pleasurable activities.
For example, during the Recruit Troop camp in the August holidays of 1939, the Boys
had Night Games instead of the usual campfire. It was a variation of the ‘Police and
Thieves’ game - the police had torchlights as guns while the thieves in trying to
avoid capture, usually found themselves in some muddy ditch! The Scouts also
ventured to further places for camps, Port Dickson being a favourite. In 1939,
15 members of the Recruit Troop left on 2 January for a camp at Port Dickson.
Pitching their three tents near the volunteer huts was difficult as the pegs would
not hold in the sandy soil and two were blown down the next day. So they all had to
live in the remaining hut. In all, eight days were spent there, cooking,
boating and fishing. In 1941, ten Scouts cycled to Port Dickson in April.
The camping experience was not just limited to intra-Troop camping.
When King George VI was crowned in 1937, a raft of Scouting events were organised to mark
the occasion. One such event was the All-Malaya Coronation Jamboree at Tanjung Malim.
(See The All-Malaya Coronation Jamboree (1937)). Meanwhile,
a Coronation Camp was held at Castle Camp from May 22 to May 25. Thirteen Scouts,
chosen from those who did not attend the Jamboree, represented the V.I. In spite
of inclement weather for the first two days (thus confining activities to indoor games),
the Scouts enjoyed themselves. And when the sun came out on the last day, they went on
a hike. For some of the Scouts, this was their first camp. One year later, in 1938,
six Scouts from both Troops had the privilege of touring Kelantan and Terenggany with SM
Mr G.C. Tacchi and four Scouts and two Scouters from Malacca. (This was probably the
working of DC Mr E.M.F. Payne of Malacca, formerly from the V.I.). Lasting more
than two weeks, the tour was thoroughly enjoyed by all.
The V.I. Scouts were occasionally visited by high-ranking officials,
including the British Residents. During such occasions, the Scouts would be inspected by
the Guest of Honour, and later proceed to put up a display for the Guest. For instance,
on 7 June 1936, during the special ‘Thank You’ ceremony for the Headmaster Mr F.L.
Shaw, the British Resident Mr T.S. Adams was also present. There was an inspection,
and an Ambulance Display by the V.I. Troops. Indeed, Mr Adams was closely linked
to the Scouts as he was the President of the Scout Association. Besides the
Residents, the Scouts were often visited by the District Commissioners, such as DC
Mr H.S. Duncan.
Entertainment ability was another skill the V.I. Scouts had in their
command. One person who played a significant role in this was ADC Mr E.M.F. Payne. In
1938, he organised a sing-song for chosen Scouts. But more importantly, in that same year,
a Scout Show was held. Not much documentation exists on this Scout Show, except for
the fact that it was successfully held on 19 May. One may infer that this Scout Show
would not have been too different from the Gang Shows or Concerts of later years,
where many non-Scouts such as teachers and parents were invited to the event packed
with performances by the Scouts. This was probably the first Scout Concert for the
V.I. Scouts.
WAR CLOUDS OVER THE HORIZON
There had been anticipation that the Scouts were to offer their
services to their colonial masters in the event of war, which did eventually break
out in Europe in 1939. This they did by registering in the Medical Auxiliary Service
and National Service, at the request of Headquarters. Those Scouts who enrolled
in National Service were above fifteen years of age while those who were too young
were enlisted in a sort of ‘Reserve’ National Service. Striving diligently to be
fully equipped with necessary skills, the Scouts passed the various examinations
for the proficiency badges in just a short time.
At the time of enrolment, the Scouts were clueless about the
importance of such services since, from 1939 to 1941, the war everyone was talking
about was in faraway Europe. All that the Scouts knew was that the National Service
roll would be of great help in an emergency as a source of man-power for odd duties,
not unlike the messenger corps who faithfully executed Baden Powell’s orders in
Mafeking about 40 years before. The National Service training included occasional
exhibitions and demonstrations, such as the A.R.P. (Air Raid Precaution) Exercises
where the Scout ‘delegates’ on the register undertook roles as cyclist messengers
or other capacities. As for the Medical Auxiliary Service, it was formed as a unit
of the Passive Defence Services to carry out First Aid work, not just for war time
but also on other occasions such during blackouts. The British Resident, during
the 1941 Empire Day made a special point of asking the SM to tell the 22 Scouts
that he greatly appreciated the work they carried out. So impressive were the Scouts
that some of them were seconded for service with the Corps of Air Raid Wardens as
instructors in First Aid!
Scout parades were thus affected by the war from several aspects.
Besides having to manage the increased work load of volunteering with the Auxiliary
and National Services, the Scouts had to manage activities without the full strength
of the Scouters. DSM Goh Keng Kwee of the Second Selangor Troop was called up for military
training and later mobilised for active service for several months, and this forced
SM Lim Eng Thye to leave the First Selangor Troop and take over the DSM’s Scoutership
in Second Selangor. Interruptions were also caused by the assignment of grounds for
military purposes. In September 1940, the Batu Road School premises were required
for military use and the use of the V.I. by both V.I. boys and BRS boys precluded
any further Wednesday morning parades. Some classrooms and the Hall in the VI was
also used by the War Taxation Office. By the time the BRS boys returned to their
own school, morning parades should have resumed, but the School Certificate
Examinations prevented most of the older members of the Troop from taking any serious
part in Scouting activities. Due to this shuffling of ground use and timetables, the
original Scouting programme had to be abandoned, particularly for the Second Selangor
Troop, and replaced with sheer revision of the work done early in the year.
Interferences abounded, but none was so great as to stall outright
the activities of the V.I. Scouting movement which had operated continuously since 1910.
But no one anticipated the rapid events from 8 December 1941 to 15 February 1942, which
led to the first and only hiatus in V.I. Scouting activities.