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Baden-Powell
Photo Gallery
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View of
the first Scout Camp
on Brownsea Island, 1907
British Scout Association
From: William Hillcourt, and Olave Baden-Powell,
Baden-Powell: The Two Lives of a Hero, 1964
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Bill
Hillcourt describes the camp on Brownsea Island:
"The
camp site was everything B-P could have hoped for. It
was a level spot at the south-western shore of
Brownsea, with a view across the water and tidal
flats towards distant Purbeck Ridge, and the imposing
ruins of Corfe Castle in a cleft in the hills. The
ground was dry, hard clay—the spot was an old
pottery site—with heather, bracken, and patches
of spiny furze aflame with yellow flowers. On one
side of the site were a couple of boggy ponds, with
oozy banks of rust-red mud overgrown with rushes and
sedge. At the other side was a deserted, half-ruined
two-storey building—the old pottery pay-house—which
would come in handy for storage. A grove of Scotch
pines and pinastic firs would provide fuel and wood
for camp construction. The shore directly below the
camp was littered with shards of tiles and broken
bricks, and unsuited for bathing —but the beach
to the east was excellent, with soft white sand."
William Hillcourt, and Olave
Baden-Powell, Baden-Powell: The Two Lives of a
Hero, 1964
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Please write to: Lewis P. Orans

Copyright
© Lewis P. Orans, 1997
Last Modified: 10:30 PM on May 16, 1997

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