Metadata
WORK ID: NEFA 22292 (Master Record)
Title | Year | Date |
THE NORTHUMBERLAND BOY SCOUTS PERMANENT CAMP, GOSFORTH. SCENES AT THE OPENING | 1932 | 1932-01-01 |
Details
Original Format: 16mm Colour: Black & White Sound: Silent Duration: 2 mins 20 secs Credits: Harry A. Soloman Genre: Amateur |
Summary Amateur record of the opening of the Northumberland Boy Scouts camp swimming pond at Gosforth Park in 1932, filmed by an early member of the Newcastle & District Amateur Cinematographers Association, Harry A. Soloman. |
Description
Amateur record of the opening of the Northumberland Boy Scouts camp swimming pond at Gosforth Park in 1932, filmed by an early member of the Newcastle & District Amateur Cinematographers Association, Harry A. Soloman.
Title: The Northumberland Boy Scouts Permanent Camp, Gosforth. Scenes at the Opening
Boy scouts and scout masters are congregating around the entrance to the new permanent camp in Gosforth Park where stalls selling teas, ices and fruit salad are set up for guests. A young...
Amateur record of the opening of the Northumberland Boy Scouts camp swimming pond at Gosforth Park in 1932, filmed by an early member of the Newcastle & District Amateur Cinematographers Association, Harry A. Soloman.
Title: The Northumberland Boy Scouts Permanent Camp, Gosforth. Scenes at the Opening
Boy scouts and scout masters are congregating around the entrance to the new permanent camp in Gosforth Park where stalls selling teas, ices and fruit salad are set up for guests. A young scout sits at a table with his mother. A fly-past over the park marks the opening. Families and scouts walk through the park to the new swimming pond, where a crowd of guests are gathered. Benches and seats are being set up for guests. Many scouts are wandering around.
Lots of guests are lounging in a grass clearing in the wood, some shading themselves with umbrellas.
There’s an official cheer at the opening led by scout masters who wave their hats. A scout master waits at one of the wood barriers at an enclosure of tents. A young girl is seated outside one of the tents.
A camp fire surrounded by a ring of logs for seating has been set up in one clearing.
Guests and scouts hang around the swimming pond in the sunshine, bunting hanging from the trees.
Title: The End
Credit: Photographed by Harry A. Soloman
Context
The filmmaker Harry A. Soloman was an early member of the Newcastle & District Amateur Cinematographers Association (ACA), which has been making cine stories and capturing the north east on film for nearly a century (still operating in 2020). It is the sole survivor of the five original ACA organisations in Britain, first set up in 1927. The other four were based in London, Manchester, Sheffield and Edinburgh. James Cameron (Senior) was the group’s first chairman and his son and daughter...
The filmmaker Harry A. Soloman was an early member of the Newcastle & District Amateur Cinematographers Association (ACA), which has been making cine stories and capturing the north east on film for nearly a century (still operating in 2020). It is the sole survivor of the five original ACA organisations in Britain, first set up in 1927. The other four were based in London, Manchester, Sheffield and Edinburgh. James Cameron (Senior) was the group’s first chairman and his son and daughter were involved in some of the first fiction films made. Newcastle & District ACA were storytellers, entertainers and documentarians – recording simple or sophisticated drama and comedies, travelogues and individual home movies, as well as local reportage. The focus was on non-commercial filmmaking, but the skill of these amateurs also attracted commissions, from businesses to the local council. Newcastle ACA footage has also found its way into early Tyne Tees Television documentary work.
On 22 February Scouts’ associations across the world celebrate Founder’s Day, the birthday of Robert Baden-Powell, born in 1857 and a lieutenant-general in the British Army during the Second Boer War in South Africa, the founder of the Scout Movement. Baden-Powell was in Newcastle upon Tyne on 1 May 1932 to officially open the Gosforth Park Scout Training Camp, where, he noted approvingly in a letter to the Northumberland Scouts County Commissioner Sir Ralph Mortimer, the boys could practise woodcraft and pioneering “under actual backwoods conditions” and hoped that “parlour scouting” would be a thing of the past in Newcastle. George Carter was the Assistant Commissioner for the Newcastle Rovers (scouts in their early 20s) and was in charge of the camp, which covered an impressive 43 acres of the park. John William ‘Jack’ Dorgan, a former pit pony driver at Ashington Colliery and British NCO serving with the 7th Battalion of the Northumberland Fusiliers on the Western Front during World War I, was the Camp Chief. Baden-Powell got a big welcome from the North East’s Boy and Girl Scouts troops as thousands attended an hour long militaristic march-past at Gosforth Park Racecourse – certainly a Grand Howl for the ageing Chief Scout. This film footage is a short fragment of the wider event recorded in another film preserved at NEFA: Boy Scout Camp Gosforth Park. Official Opening 1st May 1932 by Lord Baden-Powell Baden-Powell noticed that many boys in troops at the rally were too “under-age or physically unfit to stand the work of minor hardship” and worried that small boys would strain to keep pace with the bigger ones, and should have been in Cub Scout packs. But with a nod to the Depression in 1930s Britain, he celebrated the opportunity “to bring the poorer boys under good influences in this critical time for them when, under the cloud of unemployment, hundreds of them are lapsing into unemployableness [sic] and crime.” A newspaper called the training camp a “Boy’s Paradise” but a fair few Girl Guides were practising their survival skills in the Gosforth Park woods. The girls also wanted in on the act. Early unofficial “Girl Scouts” self-styled themselves into patrols with names like the “Wildcats” or “Nighthawks”. Along with his sister Agnes, Baden-Powell’s wife Olave, with a birthday coincidentally on the same date as her husband, helped to develop the Girl Scout movement and later became Chief Guide. She later recalled in her autobiography Window on My Heart: “When the Scouts held their first big Rally at the Crystal Palace in 1909, the “Girl Scouts” turned up [two dozen or so amongst 11,000 boys at the rally] and demanded to be inspected by my husband. So he decided to organise them into a sister movement which he called “Girl Guides”. To his credit, Baden-Powell first stated in the Headquarters Gazette that "Girls must be partners and comrades rather than dolls." Yet, he mildly capitulated to Establishment (and his sister and mother's) concerns that toughness should not be a quality that applied equally to the girls. The Girl Guides, for their part, enjoyed the chance to escape restrictive, rule-bound home lives and embrace the outdoor life. References: Baden-Powell: Founder of the Boy Scouts, Tim Jeal (Yale University Press, 2001) https://www.tynemouthscouts.org.uk/tynemouth-scouts-district-history/ https://www.28dayslater.co.uk/threads/gosforth-scout-camp-newcastle-nov-13.85857/ |