Boys Brigade march in Hatch End
16mm film Black & White Silent 1940 3:42
Summary: This intimate, retro, amateur film follows the Boys Brigade marching to the local church for inspection, and is as unique as it is intriguing.
Title number: 20515
LSA ID: LSA/27062
Description: The sun-soaked streets of Hatch End see the Boys Brigade marching down Rowlands Avenue, towards the front of Hatch End Free Church, uniformly for their inspection. What follows is a charming opportunity to see the Company members under a more personal light: each member of each Patrol is given the opportunity to own the screen, some appearing perfectly natural, but most laughing nervously under the eye of the camera. The beaming smiles of the Company conclude the film and add a particular and special joy to this short home movie.
Credits: Bawtree, Ivan (Filmmaker)
Further information: Shot by amateur filmmaker Ivan Bawtree, formerly a Corporal with a British Army Graves Registration Unit working as a photographer in France and Flanders, 1915-1920 during the First World War.
During the war, British soldier death counts were rising rapidly which inspired Sir Fabian Ware to set up the Graves Registration Commission in 1915, funded by the British Red Cross.
He acquired the services of three photographers, including 21-year-old Ivan Bawtree, to visit the cemeteries in British held areas of the Western Front to document the dead.
Keywords: Church; march; Boys Brigade
Locations: United Kingdom; London; Harrow; Hatch End; Rowlands Avenue
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