The Lord Baden-Powell | |
---|---|
Born | David Michael Baden-Powell 11 December 1940 |
Died | 3 July 2023 Australia | (aged 82)
Nationality | Rhodesian - British Australian |
Occupation | Insurance agent |
Known for | Scout leader |
Spouse |
Joan Phillips Berryman
(m. 1966) |
Children | 3 |
David Michael Baden-Powell, 4th Baron Baden-Powell (11 December 1940 – 3 July 2023) was a British AMP insurance sales agent and an active supporter of the Scout Movement.
Baden-Powell was the second son of Peter Baden-Powell, 2nd Baron Baden-Powell, and Carine Boardman, inheriting the barony following the death of his elder brother Robert in 2019, and was the grandson of the founder of World Scouting, Robert Baden-Powell, and Olave Baden-Powell, a great-grandson of the mathematician Baden Powell.
Michael Baden-Powell was born in Sinoia, Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe),[1] the second son of Peter Baden-Powell, later 2nd Baron Baden-Powell, and Carine Crause-Boardman.[2] After his father inherited the peerage, the family moved from Rhodesia to Britain in 1947.[1] He was educated at Pierrepont School, Frensham, England.[3] He worked for Fairey Aviation as a trainee engineer until April 1964, when he migrated to Australia, where he initially worked as a draftsman and eventually became an insurance sales agent.[2]
Baden-Powell had been a Scout Leader in Britain before moving to Australia.[4] He was heavily involved with Scouts Victoria, holding the position of State Commissioner - Special Duties. He had held a wide range of other positions in the organisation, including membership of associated philanthropic bodies such as the World Scout Foundation and Victorian Scout Foundation. He was also a Freemason and past Master of Baden-Powell Lodge No. 488 in Melbourne, Victoria, a Masonic Lodge founded in 1930, the first named after his grandfather, who donated the Volume of Sacred Law in 1931.[5][6][7]
In 1929, a Rolls-Royce car and an Eccles brand caravan were presented to his grandparents during the 3rd World Scout Jamboree. It was bought from money raised from Scouts world-wide who were invited to give just a penny towards the purchase. At that time, a common treat when out was to buy a small "swiss roll" filled with jam, that cost a penny, and was marketed as "a penny jam roll",[8] so B-P called the car "Jam Roll", a happy coincidence of the penny contributions, the association, and from Jamboree and Rolls-Royce. The car was sold in 1945. With John Ineson, Tony Harvey and Stephen Hilditch, Baden-Powell established a charitable company, B-P Jam Roll Ltd., which obtained a loan and purchased the car, ; funds were raised to repay the loan.[9][10] The car and caravan were reunited in 2007, during the 21st World Scout Jamboree after the car and its owner had been found by The Scout Association's archivist, Paul Moynihan, who made a proposal to purchase it.
Baden-Powell was also a member of the Victorian Branch of the National Australia Day Council.
Baden-Powell married Joan Phillips Berryman, daughter of Horace William Berryman, on 20 August 1966. They had three sons - [2]
Baden-Powell lived in Melbourne, Australia,[12] and died on 3 July 2023, at the age of 82.[4] The title passed to his eldest son, David, who is also a member of Scouts Australia.[13]
|