Girl Guides

A Girl Guide troop in the United Kingdom, 1918
Singing Girl Guides in Germany, 2007
Princess Mary and Girl Guides, 1922

Girl Guides and Girl Scouts are a Scouting movement, originally and still largely for girls and women only across various national associations. These organisations evolved from as early as 1908, with girls wishing or demanding to take part in the then grassroots 'Boy Scout' Movement.[1]

In different places around the world, the movement developed in diverse ways. In some places, girls joined or attempted to join Scouting organisations.[2] In other places, girls' groups were started, some of them later to open up to boys or merge with boys' organisations. In other instances, mixed groups were formed, sometimes to later split. In the same way, the name Girl Guide or Girl Scout has been used by groups at different times and in different places, with some groups changing from one to another.

The World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) was formed in 1928 and has member organisations in 145 countries.[3] WAGGGS celebrated the centenary of the international Girl Guiding and Girl Scouting Movement over three years, from 2010 to 2012. There are now more than 10 million Guides worldwide.

Single-gender mission

There has been much discussion about how similar Girl Guiding and Girl Scouting should be to boys' Scouting programs. While many girls saw what the boys were doing and wanted to do it too, girls' organizations have sought to avoid simply copying or mimicking the boys. Julie Bentley, appointed chief executive of the United Kingdom Girl Guides in 2012 and head of the Family Planning Association since 2007, described the Girl Guides in an interview with The Times as "the ultimate feminist organisation".[4] Even when most Scout organisations became mixed-gender, Guiding has remained separate in most countries to provide a female-centred programme. For example, the UK Scout Association introduced mixed-sex provision in 1976 with the Venture Scout programme, for all age-based sections in 1991 (optional), and became fully co-educational in 2007.[1] Girl Guiding in the UK remains limited to girls. In regard to transgender girls, they are allowed to join Girl Guiding, and transgender women are allowed to become leaders.[5][6]

History

Lieutenant-General Robert Baden-Powell was a British soldier during the Second Anglo-Boer War in South Africa (1899–1902). While Baden-Powell was the commander during the Siege of Mafeking, when the town and British soldiers were besieged by Boer soldiers, he noticed how young boys made themselves useful by carrying messages for the soldiers. When he came home, he decided to put his Scouting ideas into practice to see if they would work for young boys, and took 21 boys camping on Brownsea Island, near Poole in Dorset. The camp was a success, and Baden-Powell wrote the book Scouting for Boys, which covered tracking, signalling, cooking, etc and outlined a Scout method for an 'instruction in good citizenship'.[7] Soon boys began to organise themselves into Patrols and Troops and called themselves "Boy Scouts". Girls bought the book as well and formed themselves into Patrols of Girl Scouts while other girls and boys formed mixed Patrols.[1] Soon, Baden-Powell asked his sister, Agnes Baden-Powell, to form a separate Girl Guides organization.

In 1909 there was a Boy Scout rally at Crystal Palace in London. In those days, for girls to camp and hike was not common, as this excerpt from The Boy Scouts Headquarters Gazette of 1909 shows: "If a girl is not allowed to run, or even hurry, to swim, ride a bike, or raise her arms above her head, how can she become a Scout?"[8] Among the thousands of Boy Scouts at the rally was a group of girls from Pinkneys Green. They asked Baden-Powell to let girls be Scouts but he decided that separate single-gender organisations were a better solution. In 1910 Baden-Powell formed The Girl Guides in the United Kingdom.[9] Many, though by no means all, Girl Guide and Girl Scout groups across the globe trace their roots to this point.

Baden-Powell chose the name "Guides" from a regiment in the British Indian Army, the Corps of Guides, which served on the Northwest Frontier and was noted for its skills in tracking and survival.[10] In some countries, the girls preferred to remain or call themselves ‘Girl Scouts’.[11]

The first Guide Company was 1st Pinkneys Green Guides (Miss Baden-Powell's Own), who still exist in Pinkneys Green, Maidenhead, Berkshire.[12]

Agnes Baden-Powell, Baden-Powell's sister, was in charge of the Girl Guides in UK in its early years.[13] Others influential in the movement were Juliette Gordon Low, founder of the Girl Scouts of the USA, Olga Drahonowska-Małkowska in Poland and Antoinette Butte in France.[14]

Eerste Nederlandsche Meisjes Gezellen Vereeniging (First Dutch Girls Companions Society), 1911, first Dutch Girl Guides

Key points

Things that are shared amongst all Guide Units are:[11]

Two central themes have been present from the earliest days of the movement: domestic skills and "a kind of practical feminism which embodies physical fitness, survival skills, camping, citizenship training, and career preparation".[16] These two themes have been emphasised differently at different times and by different groups, but have remained central to Girl Guiding and Girl Scouting.

Guide International Service

The Guide International Service (G.I.S.) was an organisation set up by the Girl Guides Association in Britain in 1942 with the aim of sending to Europe after World War II teams of adult Girl Guides to do relief work.[17][18] It is described in two books: All Things Uncertain by Phyllis Stewart Brown and Guides Can Do Anything by Nancy Eastick. A total of 198 Guiders and 60 Scouts, drawn from Britain, Australia, Canada, Ireland and Kenya, served in teams.[19][20] Some went to relieve the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp, while others served in Malaya.

Uniforms

Individual national or other emblems may be found on the individual country's Scouting article.

The uniform is a specific characteristic of Scouting. Robert Baden-Powell said it "hides all differences of social standing in a country and makes for equality; but, more important still, it covers differences of country and race and creed, and makes all feel that they are members with one another of the one great brotherhood".[21]

In the 1909 The Scheme for Girl Guides, the uniform for the newly emerging movement was given as:

Jersey of company colour. Neckerchief of company colour. Skirt, knickers, stockings, dark blue. Cap - red biretta, or in summer, large straw hat. Haversack, cooking billy, lanyard and knife, walking stick or light staff. Cape, hooked up on the back. Shoulder knot, of the 'Group' colour on the left shoulder. Badges, much the same as the Boy Scouts. Officers wear ordinary country walking-dress, with biretta of dark blue, white shoulder knot, walking stick, and whistle on lanyard.[22]

Guide uniform varies within cultures, climates and the activities undertaken. They are often adorned with badges indicating a Guide's achievements and responsibilities. In some places, uniforms are manufactured and distributed by approved companies and the local Guiding organization. In other places, members make uniforms themselves.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Mills, Sarah (2011). "Scouting for Girls? Gender and the Scout Movement in Britain". Gender, Place & Culture. 18 (4): 537–556.
  2. "Girlguiding - The history of changing girls' lives". Girlguiding. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  3. World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts. "Membership". Archived from the original on 7 August 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  4. "Girl Guiding and Ultimate Feminism". Mookychick. 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-15.
  5. "Transgender children to be allowed to join Girl Guides for first time | Metro News". Metro.co.uk. 2017-01-22. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
  6. "Transgender and gender reassignment". Girlguiding. 2016-11-17. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
  7. Mills, Sarah (2013). "'An Instruction in Good Citizenship': Scouting and the Historical Geographies of Citizenship Education". Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. 38 (1): 120–134.
  8. Scout Headquarters Gazette 1909
  9. http://www.wagggsworld.org/en/about/guiding/guidinghistory
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-02-24. Retrieved 2010-10-16.
  11. 1 2 The Guide Handbook, London: The Guide Association, 1996
  12. 1st Pinkneys Green Guides
  13. Inc., Advanced Solutions International,. "History". www.girlguides.ca. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  14. "Our History". WAGGGS. 2004. Archived from the original on 2007-06-08. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
  15. "Olave Baden-Powell | Home". www.spanglefish.com. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  16. Aickin Rothschild, Mary (Autumn 1981). "To Scout or to Guide? The Girl Scout-Boy Scout Controversy, 1912-1941". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. University of Nebraska Press. 6 (3): 115–121. ISSN 0160-9009. JSTOR 3346224. doi:10.2307/3346224.
  17. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2507&dat=19431025&id=bjxAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=YlkMAAAAIBAJ&pg=3236,2831161 The Glasgow Herald - Oct 25, 1943 Helping Victims in Occupied Lands. Girl Guides' Service
  18. http://www.smh.com.au/national/obituaries/guiding-hand-took-on-world-20110401-1crlw.html Guiding hand took on world Nancy Eastick, 1920-2011 The Sydney Morning Herald April 2nd, 2011
  19. Hampton, Janie (2010). How the Girl Guides Won the War. HarperPress.
  20. Liddell, Alix (1976). Story of the Girl Guides 1938-1975. London: Girl Guides Association.
  21. Wade, E.K. (1957). "27 Years With Baden-Powell" (PDF). Why the Uniform?, ch 12. Pinetree.web. Retrieved 2006-07-24.
  22. Kerr, Rose (1976). Story of the Girl Guides 1908-1938. London: Girl Guides Association.
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