| 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. |