FOUNDING OF THE BB
William Smith had started as a a teacher in the Sabbath School which was
held in the mission hall, where he found that the older boys were bored
and restless. They were suspicious of teachers who told them to sit
still, make less noise, and generally behave themselves - in short, they
were typical teenagers! He compared this with the time he spent on a
Saturday afternoon, as a Lieutenant with the volunteers, when he had no
difficulty in making a hundred men obey his every word of command on the
nearby drill ground.
It was then he had his idea: 'Drill and Discipline'. Why not turn the
Sabbath School boys into a volunteer band or brigade, with the same
military order, obedience, discipline and self-respect as the
volunteers? A programme combining games as well as discipline,
gymnastics and sport as well as hymns and prayers would appeal to the
boys. William Smith planned the programme for this new idea with two
friends, and on the 4th October 1883 the three leaders invited the boys
of North Woodside Mission Sabbath School to join The Boys' Brigade.
The new organisation's badge was an anchor, and the motto 'Sure and
Stedfast'. This was taken from the Authorised Version of the Bible, from
the Epistle to the Hebrews, chapter 6, verse 19: 'Which hope we have as
an anchor of the soul, both sure and stedfast'. The Object was also
quite clear from the beginning:
"The advancement of Christ's Kingdom among Boys and the promotion of
habits of Reverence, Discipline, Self-Respect, and all that tends
towards a true Christian Manliness."
(The word Obedience was added some ten years later).
For the first year the Boys only wore a Rosette as a badge, and the
officers wore the civilian bowler hat. The following year the Cap, Belt,
and haversack were brought together as the first complete uniform. The
Pill-box in common use during these days had no chin-strap and fitted
close to the head, but it had two distinguished rows of white braid worn
at a jaunty angle. Soon afterwards the proper pill-box was brought in
and the officers turned to the Glengarry for their headgear.
THE FOUNDER

William
Smith was born on 27th October 1854 at Pennyland House, Thurso,
Scotland. At 15 he moved to Glasgow to work in his uncle's business.
While there, he joined the volunteers and by 19 he had become a Lance
Corporal in the 1st Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers. The very same year he
joined the church after hearing the evangelists Moody & Sankey.
By 1883 William Smith had become a Lieutenant and was teaching in the
North Woodside Mission Sunday School. The boys in his Sunday School
class were a challenge, and he was open to new ideas about how best to
deal with them. Someone suggested that the methods used in the
volunteers might be appropriate, and by this inspiration the Boys'
Brigade was created.
William Smith took a leading role in the new organisation, accepting a
full-time post as the first Brigade Secretary in 1887. He worked
non-stop for the movement, on two occasions even crossing the Atlantic
to promote the Boys' Brigade in Canada and the U.S.A. Throughout he
remained Captain of the 1st Glasgow company, rarely missing a meeting.
In 1909 William Smith was knighted by King Edward VII for his service to
boys.
Sir William Smith died on 10th May 1914 after being suddenly taken ill
at a Boys' Brigade meeting in London. He was buried in Glasgow.
THE EARLY YEARS OF THE BB
For the first year, the 1st Glasgow
company was alone, but shortly afterwards this new method of dealing
with boys began to spread. By the end of the third year the movement
numbered 2,000 boys, mostly in Scotland, centred around Glasgow, with
companies ranged from Ayr to Inverness.
Shortly afterwards the movement filtered southward into England, all the
way to London itself. In 1887 the BB's advance crossed the sea, with the
formation of the 1st Jersey, and then across the Irish sea, when the 1st
Belfast was formed in 1888 and the 1st Dublin formed in 1890.
The movement's great advance continued, with missionary companies soon
developed overseas, usually at isolated stations and outposts. Perhaps
the most notable was the growth in Nigeria. The organisation also spread
across the Atlantic, to Canada and the U.S.A., encouraged by the
founder's visits there in 1895 and 1907.
It was not all plain sailing though. There was often opposition and
criticism, and many Boys were rough and unruly and not as civilised as
those today. The glengarry cap would sometimes attract the scornful cry
of "Scotchie! Scotchie!", and in the worst cases drill parades were
conducted under a fusillade of stones and bricks thrown upon roofs and
through windows!
From the early years, the leaders of the companies had come together to
form the Council of the Boys' Brigade, providing the machinery for the
administration of the movement. In 1887 William Smith was appointed as
the first full-time Brigade Secretary, and he dedicated his time to the
organisation. He brought many influential people into the organisation
to strengthen its advance, including the Duke of York, who filled the
position of Patron as prince and King for forty years.
One early innovation was to hold a camp - at the time, public opinion
was aghast at the idea of Boys camping out in the "wilds"! The first
camp by the 1st Glasgow company was held in a building at Tighnabruach
on the Kyles of Bute in 1886. William Smith was an experienced
yachtsman, and each squad had its own craft - it was a sight indeed to
see the boats in nautical array on the placid waters of Bute. Camping
spread rapidly and camping under canvas soon became the normal order of
the day. Often camping became looked to as the crowning of the company's
year.
In 1903 the annual display at the Royal Albert Hall was of special
significance - from it can be traced the very start of the Boy Scout
movement! General Baden-Powell, back from his exploits in Mafeking,
agreed to preside over the forthcoming display and began a sincere
friendship with the founder. Baden-Powell saw the possibility of
teaching the Boys the art of Scouting. The seeds of the Scout movement
had been sown and were soon to spread like a prairie fire.
In 1909 William Smith was knighted for his services to Boys. He
continued his work within the organisation throughout. During 1913 the
question of union with the Boys Life Brigade was discussed - but a dozen
years were to pass before this effort would be successful. On May 8th
1914, the founder fell ill during a meeting of the Brigade Executive in
London, and two days later he passed to rest.
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