His idea was that Scouts should prepare themselves to become productive citizens and strong leaders and to bring joy to other people.
This is from the 13th/latest edition of the Boy Scout Handbook: “In the air raids we saw the spectacle of children of 12 and 14 performing with perfect coolness and composure the useful function assigned to them in the streets and public offices.”īut Baden-Powell wasn’t just thinking about first aid and wartime emergencies when he coined the motto. “Their keen eyes were added to the watchers along the coasts,” Winston Churchill wrote in a piece published in Scouting magazine in 1955. The Great War loomed, and soon the Boy Scouts - not a military organization but a service-minded one - would be called upon to play their part. In the late 1900s, Baden-Powell wanted young people equipped to react quickly to an emergency. Notice how the initials for Be Prepared and Baden-Powell are the same? That’s no coincidence it’s just the way Baden-Powell planned it. Through its fun, values-based program, Scouting prepares young people for life. More than a century later, preparedness is still a cornerstone of Scouting.
In Scouting for Boys, Baden-Powell wrote that to Be Prepared means “you are always in a state of readiness in mind and body to do your duty.” (Two years later, in 1910, the Boy Scouts of America was founded.) He published it in Scouting for Boys in 1908. In 1907, Baden-Powell, an English soldier, devised the Scout motto: Be Prepared. Upon hearing the Scout motto, someone asked Scouting founder Robert Baden-Powell the inevitable follow-up question.