St Albans, Herts: Scouts on Standby
The first to offer organised home front help
Their motto is 鈥渂e prepared鈥. One thousand scouts in Hertfordshire were the first to show just how prepared they were for World War One.
Two days into war, scouts in St Albans were the first in Britain to organise themselves into a 24-hour rota. Making bandages, moving donated furniture and looking after officers鈥 horses were some of the many duties they performed.
As the war progressed, scouts were called on to guard coastal areas and work on the land so more men could be freed up for military service. Quoted in the Times History of the War, Prime Minister David Lloyd George, said: 鈥淲hen the boyhood of a nation can give such practical proofs of its honour, straightness and loyalty, there is not much danger of that nation going under.鈥
Location: St Albans, Hertfordshire AL1 1SE
Image shows George Foxlee (left) from the 4th St Albans scout group, who gave the 鈥渁ll clear鈥 on his bugle after Zeppelin raids, and Tom (right) who is a current scout in the group
Photographs courtesy of Hertfordshire Scouts and Julie Raynes, St Albans
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