Exploradores de España
The Exploradores de España was a Spanish Scout association founded by Cavalry captain Teodoro Iradier y Herrero in 1912 and inspired by the boy scouts of Robert Baden-Powell, whose objective was physical, moral, civic and patriotic education. In its early years it had a rapid growth and expansion. The association was a founding member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement in 1922,[1][2] which it belonged to until 1938.[3] After a royal audience granted to Iradier in early June 1912, it received the personal support of King Alfonso XIII of Spain and the authorities of the time.[4] However, it was opposed by the Catholic Church and certain cultural sectors that viewed with suspicion the institutional evolution, which was highly militarized and subordinated to the direct service of power.[5] After a brief period of decline between 1914 and 1919, it received support from the Directorio Militar of Primo de Rivera during the 1920s, experiencing a change of educational direction and, consequently, a strong increase in personnel, in what could be considered the golden age of the institution.[6] In addition to such times, the exploradores provided a renewed vision of how to practice pedagogy: the formation of the character of youth, and instruction in religious values and citizenship.[7] After the Spanish Civil War, the organization was declared in suspension of activities by ministerial order of 22 April 1940, as its dependence on international organizations was considered "intolerable".[8] BackgroundThe first known attempt of scouting in Spain began in Barcelona. It was the initiative of Pedro Roselló Axet, Cavalry captain, friend and colleague of Teodoro Iradier; together with Ramón Solé i Lluch—an enthusiastic worker of scouting—and Narcís de Romaguera, among others.[9][10] Pedro Roselló's objective was to achieve a healthy youth, physically, morally and spiritually. Thus the Exploradores de Barcelona were born in 1911, officially constituted in 1912[11] and that in 1913 would become part of the Exploradores de España.[12][13] In 1914, they amounted to 1064 members, organized in twenty-two groups.[14] During its decline, in 1916, the number of members dropped to less than 450 members.[15] Parallel to the Exploradores Barceloneses, there were other less successful Catalan initiatives such as the Jovestels de Catalunya of Ignasi Ribera-Rovira in 1912, related to the Republican Nationalist Federal Union,[16] and with two groups, Cataluña and Canigó.[17] Also the Exploradores Republicanos (radical boy scouts),[18] organization under the aegis of Alejandro Lerroux[19] and led in Barcelona by Antonio Cruz.[20] FoundationTeodoro Iradier received the support of King Alfonso XIII and from 1911, with the help of the publicist Arturo Cuyás Armengol, a public awareness campaign was launched and the youth movement was very well received, especially among the wealthier classes.[21] In Iradier's words: "Scouting is life in the open, the learning of useful things, the doing of good works",[22] as well as "the explorador of today will be the practical man of tomorrow" and "will proudly hold the title of transformer of our homeland".[23] Once obtained the necessary support and approved its statutes by the Civil Government of Madrid on 30 July 1912,[24] Iradier relocated to his hometown. On 11 August 1912 he founded the first Exploradores de España troop, the Exploradores de Vitoria, and the Madrid Troop in October.[25] Members of the first National CouncilBy the end of 1912, the first steering committee and executive council of the institution was constituted,[26] including the following personalities: President
Vice-Presidents
Treasury
Advertising and Resources Section
Organization Section
Instruction Section
Secretary - General Commissioner
Deputy Secretary
Expansion, supporters and detractorsOn 27 April 1913, 2397 exploradores gathered at the Atlético Madrid field for the promise ceremony, with the attendance of the kings of Spain. The Madrid districts of Buenavista, with three groups; Palacio, with six groups; Latina, with two; Centro, with four; Congreso, with three; Inclusa with two; Hospicio, with three; and Universidad, Hospital and Chamberí, with two each[27] That same year, the first issue of the magazine El Explorador,[28] and Pedro Rosselló's Exploradores Barceloneses became part of the Exploradores de España.[29] In January 1914, there were already 68 Exploradores en España committees and in July the first national camp was held in Riofrío, Real Sitio de San Ildefonso,[30] in which 580 troops from 18 towns from Aragón, Asturias, Barcelona, Burgos, Galicia, Granada, Guadalajara, Madrid, Murcia, Palencia, Salamanca, Santander, Valladolid and Zamora participated. In December the first census appeared, with 18 024 young men and 115 committees throughout Spain. That same year, the Royal Order of February 12 of the Ministry of Public Instruction and Fine Arts granted legal personality to the Asociación de los Exploradores de España.[31][32] José María Quintana Cabanas cites a period of disagreements with the Church which, as was happening in other countries, accused the Explorers of Spain of naturalism and of hindering the religious practices of children.[8] On the other hand, a series of internal conflicts in the organization forced the resignation of Iradier as secretary-commissioner in February 1915 and, in solidarity with him, also that of the president of the explorers, José Messía y Gayoso, duke de Tamames.[33] As reported in El Explorador:
The Duke of Tamames was reinstated on 11 March 1915, at the request of the national assembly, a position he held until his death in 1917, being replaced by Julio Quesada-Cañaveral. The new governing board was formed by Antonio Trucharte Samper as secretary, Arturo Cuyás as general commissioner and Teodoro Iradier y Herrero as member.[35] The distrust was not limited to the ecclesiastical sphere, since educational renovationists also distrusted the excessive militarization of the exploradores in their particular vision of scouting.[36] In 1913, the Al-lots Guaites sponsored by the Catholic Church were created in Mallorca, which would be integrated into the Exploradores de España in 1918.[37] The Mallorcan exploradores, a section of the Mallorcan Catholic Sports Federation, were led by their founder and organizer, the priest Francesc Sureda Blanes.[38] In 1915 King Alfonso XIII gave the explorers a plot of land on El Pardo mountain to be used as a permanent camp. That same year the first group of sea scouts appeared in Santander,[39] también con apoyo real.[40] In 1917 the king accepted the honorary presidency of the Scouts of Spain.[41] In 1920, a contingent of Exploradores de España participated in the first world jamboree at Olympia, London. That same year, there were 305 exploradores committees. It was at that time that the confessionality of the institution was defined—which grew and evolved secularly—[42] and the image and the theoretical and pedagogical knowledge of the scout movement in Spain was improved.[43] On 26 February 1920 the association received the consideration of national by Royal Decree.[44] After international recognition in 1922, the government decided to reorganize the institution, but without dispensing with the centralist and pro-government character that characterized it.[45] On 13 September 1923 a coup d'état by the captain general of Catalonia, Miguel Primo de Rivera y Orbaneja, would give way to a military dictatorship. Primo de Rivera, father of exploradores and of whose National Council he was a founding member, granted it greater protection in all areas.[46] In those early years of the Dictatorship, Francisco García Molinas, vice president of the National Council, made the Exploradores de España available to the Government as a means for civic education, a school of citizenship for the "improvement of the race" and an example of solidarity between classes. The idea was well received by the Directorio Militar, which began to propose a national plan of physical and pre-military training among young people, and by royal order of May 1925, a commission of various ministerial departments and civilian entities was created for this purpose.[47] The more progressive sectors did not look favorably on the dictator's support; in the words of Alexandre Galí, the exploradores were perceived as an instrument of the dictatorship and the regime's support distanced them even further from the people.[48] In 1926 Antonio Trucharte Samper died unexpectedly, his absence provoked an internal crisis in the national council of the association.[49] He was replaced by Luis de la Gándara Marsella, who also died suddenly two years later, in 1928.[50] In the mid-1920s, the English engineers who had come to work in the Riotinto Mines gave a very important push for the creation and consolidation of scouting in the Huelva area.[51] The golden age in Minas de Riotinto was under the leadership of Francisco (Frank) Timmis (d. 1931), president of the Local Council, English national and great connoisseur of Baden-Powell's work. In 1924, the Alto Patronato de Exploradores en Minas de Riotinto, under the Schools Department of the Rio Tinto Company Limited, left the organization in the hands of Timmis and in a short time they had about 300 members among the students of the RTCL schools where they learned to march, practiced sports, olympic gymnastics, first aid, and were inculcated with scouting principles.[52] Also in the north, San Sebastián and Bilbao, whose exploradores troops had been active since 1913,[53][54] received help and saw remarkable growth with contributions from Englishmen working in the mines of the Estuary of Bilbao.[51] Emili Beüt led the changing trend towards Baden-Powell scouting in Valencia, advocating a less centralized and militaristic institution. According to Beüt, certain sectors intended to perpetuate the image of the scouts as children's battalions.[55] He was the originator of the Federación Regional Valenciana de Exploradores in 1927.[56] There were also intellectuals who showed some opposition to the exploradores, among them Miguel de Unamuno, who stated in the magazine Nuevo Mundo on 16 November 1917, that he did not believe in the pedagogical function of the boy scouts because of their "contrived character", an article answered by J. Cueto in El Explorador;[57] such a manifesto provoked an outcry from the institution and a reply from Juan Antonio Dimas (Lobo Gris) of the Águilas Troop (Murcia) on November 19. In 1921, Unamuno published again with the same argument, proposing football for the formation of young people, as "spontaneous, free, and less intervened".[46][58][59] Juan Antonio Dimas was the first to speak of "Scouting pedagogy",[8] and would be the first national Scoutmaster in 1932 at the suggestion of Baden Powell himself.[60][61] In 1930, initial steps were taken to organize a guide association in Spain, headed by María Abrisqueta de Zulueta,[62] of San Sebastián. Until its definitive foundation in September 1933, as Asociación de Muchachas Guías,[63] the guide companies were protected and promoted by the Exploradores de España. María Abrisqueta, who had been proposed from the beginning as national commissioner of guides, resigned in June 1935 from her responsibilities in the association.[64] 1929 National Jamboree and 2nd RepublicThe National Jamboree of Barcelona was held between 21 August and 3 September 1929, benefiting from the momentum caused by the International Exposition. It was the first of international character to be organized in Spain and also the last, held in Montjuïc, with the participation of 2000 scouts, Spanish and foreigners, from fourteen countries:[65] England, France, Hungary, Germany, Tangier, Poland, Chile, Holland, Sweden, Romania, Scotland, Australia, Brazil and Portugal. Most were stopping over from the Birkenhead World Jamboree held that same year. During the event, a Muslim explorer from Tangier, Mustafa-ab-el-Kader, died after an accident that made headlines at the time.[66][67][68][69] In 1927, Josep Maria Batista i Roca founded the Minyons de Muntanya,[70] and in the early 1930s, the first Catholic confessional groups appeared, which would be constituted as the Scouts Hispanos in 1934 by the priest Jesús Martínez and a former commissioner Mario González Pons—an institution of ephemeral existence.[71] Also in 1930, Isidoro de la Cierva (Lobo Blanco) became General Commissioner and Juan Antonio Dimas became Deputy General Commissioner of the National Council.[72] In 1931, the Spanish Republic was proclaimed and the insignia was modified almost immediately, removing the fleur-de-lis present since 1922, and replacing it with a hand in a scout salute.[73] The president of the National Council, Francisco García Molinas, sent a telegram to the groups ordering "compliance with the constituted powers."[74] By Decree of the provisional Government of the Republic, it was transmitted on 21 May 1931 to the Ministry of Public Instruction and Fine Arts how many attributions corresponded to the Presidency, in relation to the Exploradores de España.[75] In April 1933, the first five general commissioners were elected following the change of statutes to adapt them to the new democratic regime:[76][77]
Despite the reluctance of the most radical Republicans, who criticized the link between the Exploradores de España and the Bourbon monarchy, Niceto Alcalá Zamora, president of the Republic, accepted in 1933 the honorary presidency of the Exploradores de España.[78] According to Francisco Armada Muñoz, the influence of General José Miaja Menant, general commissioner of the Exploradores and of Republican ideology, had much to do with this decision.[79] The politician and founder of the exploradores de Granada, Luis López-Dóriga, was the translator of Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys from English into Spanish in 1934, a work that was never published in Spain.[80] On 2 May 1936 the President of the Republic officially recognized the Asociación Nacional de Exploradores de España and confirmed the statutes presented in July 1932.[81] Assault on the Exploradores de Barcelona headquarters and the Catalan splitAfter the incidents of the proclamation of the Catalan Republic on 14 April 1931, the Catalan identity character and the detachment to the national centralist associations in certain sectors of Catalonia—as was the case of the Spanish boy scouts—were accentuated and developed. In the opinion of Félix Cucurull, "as a consequence of the oppression to which it was subjected",[82] legacy of the Directiorio Militar, considering that "a nationalist sentiment such as the Catalan one could be sacrificed by violence and silence".[83] However, Juan Peiró blamed such behavior on the fact that "the freedom of Catalonia was not achievable except by a procedure of direct action", the result of "centuries of submission under the yoke of magistrates, military and stowaways incapable of understanding the soul of the Catalans".[84] One of the most hostile precedents was the assault on the headquarters of the exploradores loyal to the national association on 28 April 1930,[85] starring a sector of the jovent republicà (republican youth)[16][86] during a student strike, causing the Exploradores Barceloneses to lose their flag. According to the available documentation on Catalan scouting from the National Archive of Catalonia, in 1933 the most Catalanist sector, openly politicized left-wing and akin to the nationalist postulates of the time, the Boy Scouts de Catalunya was organized as an association of regional character whose strong core would be the protagonist of a major split of the Exploradores de España in Catalonia.[87] Among the demands of the breakaway group was to dispense with the use of the national flag in the activities of the association and total independence in its institutional relations with the International Scout Bureau in London.[88] In 1932, in a decentralizing attempt, the Catalan grouping had previously been constituted as the Federación de los Boy Scouts de Cataluña, linked to the Exploreradores de España;[7] On 22 February 1933 Carlos Cifuentes Rodríguez resigned as commissioner of Catalonia, and Narcís de Romaguera, head of the Catalanist faction, was dismissed by the National Council which refused to cede autonomy. The fracture was consummated, backed by historical figures of the time of Pedro Roselló, Ramón Soler and Jaume Roca.[89] The honorary presidency of the new institution was offered to Francesc Macià, president of the Generalitat de Catalunya.[90] After the split, the Exploradores de España en Cataluña were reduced to a minimum, their presence limited to the municipalities of Barcelona and Tarrasa, and the autonomous English and French groups.[91][89] The general commissariat reported its position in September 1934, in press notes and in its informative organ El Explorador:
In October 1934, after the reorganization of the exploradores in Catalonia, the magazine El Explorador announced the new board of directors:
In any case, it was evident that the perseverance of the exploradores in integrating themselves among the Catalan excursionist movement through their participation in the Campaments Generals de Catalunya—an annual event of the time initiated in 1928— and it indicates that they were neither militant Spanishists nor conscious agents of primoriverismo, as concludes Albert Balcells at the end of the chapter on the scouts and the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera in his book L'escoltisme català (1911-1978).[94] Subsequently, as a result of the participation of prominent members of mainly Minyons de Muntanya and Boy Scouts de Catalunya in the events of October 6,[95] an order appeared in the Diari Oficial de la Generalitat de Catalunya annulling any recognition and benefit to the local scouting institutions. A situation that would not be normalized until the pardons of 1936:[96]
Civil WarMost of the Exploradores de España groups suspended or limited their activities during the Civil War (1936-1939), as many rovers (older scouts) and instructors were deployed.[98] At the outbreak of the uprising, on 18 July 1936, many groups were in summer camp. Although almost all managed to return to their towns without major difficulties, the exploradores of the Zaragoza Troop who were in the Odesa National Park were evacuated to Barcelona where they found refuge and were placed under the custody of the Boy Scouts de Catalunya. In June 1937, following a number of efforts by the Red Cross, they managed to pass through France via Hendaye-Irun and were able to return to their homes.[99][100] Early into the war, there were practically no official manifestations or dispositions on either side, neither in favor nor against the exploradores. The Exploradores de España, in accordance with the principles of their statutes, remained distanced from any political ideology, and wherever the local council considered it possible, offered their collaboration to the legally established authority to perform services of a humanitarian nature.[101] However, in the areas known as "nationals", there was an apparent tendency from other European countries to abolish scouting or, failing that, to transform it into something more in line with the totalitarian postulates of the regime. On 28 July 1936 the Correo de Mallorca issued a statement on its front page:
It was towards the end of the war when a certain attitude of the rebel side was openly evident, a bad omen for the future of the scouting institution. The exploradores were dissolved in some territories by the military authorities, for example in Galicia, on the grounds of being "a modern institution of exotic origin" and for "subtracting the position of Spanish youth in other Falange Youth Organizations such as cadetes, flechas o pelayos" as quoted by the captain general of Galicia, Germán Gil y Yuste in his decree of dissolution, dated 25 March 1938,[103] and published in various press media of the time.[104][105][106][107] At the end of the war in April 1939, the scout association found itself in a complicated situation and without information of what had become of the local councils. Many rovers and instructors had been killed in the fighting, others were in exile or simply considered missing.[108] However, there was a small nucleus in Madrid that kept their faith in scouting, but they were cautious in their attempt to reorganize, partly because of the hostile attitude of some leading cadres of the public administration.[109] But there were also sectors that accepted the new regime and that expressed their intention to abide by any administrative resolution that meant the total annihilation of the association, as is evident from the correspondence coming from the International Scout Bureau in London which stated:
and the response of Fernando Molina-Niñirola Sánchez (Tigre en Acecho), then commissioner of the Murcia Group:
Víctor José Jiménez y Malo de Molina was one of the supporters of initiating activities aimed to the reorganization of the Exploradores de España by the end of the Civil War. He tried unsuccessfully to safeguard the survival of the exploradores in a last attempt to create Exploradores de FET y de las JONS (Falange Española Tradicionalista y de las JONS), in a letter accompanying a broad project sent to Raimundo Fernández-Cuesta, on 26 May 1938:
The proposal was rejected. Following in the footsteps of the German and Italian scout associations, the Exploradores de España were on their way to their end. José María Gutiérrez del Castillo, national secretary for the Youth Organization of FET-JONS, in a letter to Fernández-Cuesta on 17 June 1938, was in favor of eradicating the Scouts and reserving exclusively the "Youth Organizations" of FET-JONS (which would later be reconverted into the "Frente de Juventudes"), as the only channel of participation for Spanish youth.[112] José María Gutiérrez del Castillo (known as Chemari in his native Valladolid) was the creator in 1937 of the OOJJ, turning all his efforts to eliminate the boy scouts and any other direct competition to his purpose, to unify them into a single entity: La Falange. He was the architect of a forced absorption, turning Valladolid into the nerve center of such a strategy, where any independent initiative to the single youth movement became impossible.[113] The proposal was rejected. Following in the footsteps of the German and Italian scout associations, the Spanish scouts were on their way to their end. José María Gutiérrez del Castillo, national secretary for the Youth Organization of FET-JONS, in a letter to Fernández-Cuesta on 17 June 1938, was in favor of eradicating the Scouts and reserving exclusively the "Youth Organizations" of FET-JONS (which would later be reconverted into the "Frente de Juventudes"), as the only channel of participation for Spanish youth.[112] José María Gutiérrez del Castillo (known as Chemari in his native Valladolid) was the creator in 1937 of the OOJJ, turning all his efforts to eliminate the boy scouts and any other direct competition to his purpose, to unify them into a single entity: La Falange. He was the creator of a "forced" absorption, turning Valladolid into the nerve center of such a strategy, where any independent initiative to the single youth movement became impossible.[113] Fernando Molina-Niñirola SánchezFernando Molina-Niñirola Sánchez (3 October 1908 – 20 July 1990) joined the Murcia Troop on 9 May 1921. A doctor by profession, he was a member of the Catholic Association of Propagandists.[114] He kept up the Espuña Camp every summer during the Civil War. He was rewarded with the Silver Wolf on 31 December 1938.[115][116] Although he maintained his relationship with his fellow exploradores, he would not return to active scouting. However, Fernando Molina-Niñirola kept in custody all the scouting documentary heritage in the region, from the Agrupación Local de Murcia (1915-1939), the Consejo Provincial de los Exploradores de Murcia (from 1917), the clandestinity period and its successors until about 1980, documentation that was donated by his relatives to the General Archive of the Region of Murcia in 2013.[117] Suspension of activitiesOn 28 February 1940 Teodoro Iradier died.[118] On 22 April 1940 the Orden Circular number 9 of the Ministerio de la Gobernación, sent to all civil governors, provided:
This order was appealed by the institution, without success, since the youth policy of the regime was entrusted exclusively to FET-JONS. The Exploradores de España were banned,[120] and consequently their premises and assets were seized. The general commissariat of the association, initially composed of Juan Antonio Dimas (who resigned in 1940), Francisco Medina, Isidoro de la Cierva (who died in 1939) and Víctor José Jiménez y Malo de Molina, functioned intermittently in Madrid.[109] Subsequently, some nuclei emerged again that would open another chapter in the history of Spanish scouting during the clandestinity period. Former scouts and leaders kept the spirit of the movement alive, hoping to return to an authorized activity.[121] Old files and all kinds of symbols of the association hidden by former members were used at meals and private meetings to prevent them from being seized.[98] Francisco Medina Ample, last known general commissioner of the Association and successor of Dimas,[122] later received an official notice from the Ministry of the Interior "reminding him that the Asociación de Exploradores de España was still in suspension of activities."[109] SymbologyIradier chose the wheel and five-pointed star as its institutional emblem, in his own words "like the polar star that guides sailors, like the star of the east that guided the Magi to the birthplace of the Redeemer, and like the emblem of the great explorers and of the General Staffs of the Armies".[123] As a motto "Siempre Adelante" (English: Always Onward), since "the explorador sees a future to which he directs his efforts, straight, sure, without hesitation"; the Exploradores de Zaragoza released a publication whose title coincided with the same motto in 1924.[124] The ensign for the association was the national flag with a diagonal green stripe, "Symbol of Nature and Hope". Each troop added the coat of arms of the locality in the center with the inscription "Los Exploradores de España" in the upper stripe next to the badge of the association. In 1921, a Royal Decree granted military honors to the flag of Spain carried by the troops of the Exploradores de España.[125] For his part, Dimas said of the national ensign that "it carries in itself light of sun, blood and hope".[126] Promise and Code of the ExploradorPromise of the ExploradorOn my honor, I promise to do what is in my power, to:[127][128]
Code of the ExploradorThe code—unlike its English version which had ten points—had twelve points:[129][130][128]
Hymn of Exploradores de EspañaEarly 1913, the "Himno de los Exploradores" was composed with lyrics by Mariano Benavente Martínez, father of two exploradores from Madrid and brother of the playwright Jacinto Benavente, member of the Real Academia Española.[131] The musical score was composed by another father of exploradores from Madrid, the musician Melecio Brull y Ayerra.[132] LyricsOriginal full version of the hymn of the explorador:[133]
Other relevant figures of the institutionSevero Montalvo CórdobaSevero Montalvo Córdoba (1883-1935), chief telegrapher by profession. Known in the scouting circles as Lobo Rojo, he was a brilliant troop leader in Águilas (Murcia),[134] president of the group and recognized as the best scouting technician of his time. During the institutional decline between, 1914 and 1919, he was the critical voice of the association, and gave as reasons the resignation of Iradier,[135] which added to the lack of enthusiasm of the first benefactors and the weariness of the public who judged by what they saw. Together with Juan Antonio Dimas they translated into Spanish the scouting work The Patrol System by Roland Philipps.[136] He was elected in 1933 one of the five general commissioners of the association, as secretary-administrator. He committed suicide one morning on 19 September 1935,[137] as quoted by José María López Lacárcel, during an allegedly long period of depression and emotional problems; after his death he was replaced by Isidoro de la Cierva. The tragedy was much lamented, as he was "a much loved character in the region", reason for 10 000 people to pay him the last farewell, among which were the troops of Albox, Murcia, and Cartagena.[138] Severo Montalvo has a street dedicated in the municipality of Águilas for his extensive career in favor of local youth.[139] Mariano de la Paz Gómez y RodríguezMariano de la Paz Gómez y Rodríguez, doctor in Law and in Philosophy and Literature.[140] He joined the Exploradores de España in 1914 and was recorded as commander of the Linares Troop in 1919. He was local commissioner of Linares and provincial of Córdoba, and president of the Federación de Exploradores del Norte Andaluz. He was very fond of natural sciences and archaeology, he was also taxidermist and writer, among his works are La Propiedad privada en las guerras marítimas (T. Fortanet, 1905) and Estudio histórico sobre la religión del imperio de los Incas (T. Fortanet, 1907). He received the "Lobo de Plata" on 1 July 1934,[115] supported by the councils of Linares, Águilas, Centenillo, Málaga, Córdoba and Madrid.[141] He had a habit of inviting nearby troops of exploradores to his spacious estate.[142] The "Museo de Ciencias Naturales" that bears his name remains in Linares.[143] Enrique del Castillo y PezEnrique del Castillo y Pez (b. 21 March 1876), commander of the Carabineros.[144] Chief of the Malaga Troop and instructor of Fuengirola and Marbella. Ex-combatant of the Cuban War, he held numerous military decorations such as the First Class Cross of Military Merit with white badge awarded on 28 November 1918, and the Gold Medal of Scouting Merit, awarded for his valuable work as an instructor.[145][146] He received the "Lobo de Plata" in 1934.[115] In 1938. he became available to the Military Governor of Malaga, coming from the Malaga Telephone Exchange, being declared fit for bureaucratic services after being discharged from the Malaga Hospital.[147] He has two streets dedicated to his name in Malaga,[148] as an adopted son of that city, and Marbella.[149] Javier Casares BescansaJavier Casares Bescansa (1875-1964), medical lieutenant colonel of the Navy.[150] Chief of the El Ferrol Troop in 1922 and local commissioner in 1935. Javier Casares was the creator of Yodovitamín Casares syrup, a very popular immune system booster in the mid-1920s.[151] A promoter of the ferrolan Semana Santa, he was a member of Acción Católica,[152] and member of the Confederación Española de Derechas Autónomas in Galicia.[153] He received the "Lobo de Plata" in 1934.[115] He combined his medical and research endeavours with the Christian values of service to others, love of nature and sporting activities. His three sons were all exploreradores; one of them, Javier Casares Fontela, wrote and published in 1932 his scouting experience in a memoir.[154] Ángel Rebollo VizcaínoÁngel Rebollo Vizcaíno (d. 16 June 1949), tailor by profession, joined the institution in 1913 and later became an instructor. He was listed as troop chief and local commissioner of La Coruña from 1925 to October 1936. In 1935, he was part of the board of directors of the cycling group Velo-Club Coruñés.[155] He received the "Lobo de Plata" in 1934.[156][115] He was one of the candidates of the Grupo Independiente Coruñesista in the first municipal elections of Franco's regime (21 November 1948), candidacy that was made public on 16 November 1948.[157] Francisco Medina AmpleFrancisco Medina Ample, teacher and director of the National Orphanage of El Pardo, Madrid (ONP).[158] One of the first five general commissioners, as delegate of the lobatos and coordinator for groups of schools and other entities, in 1933.[159] Francisco Medina signed the communiqués with Juan Antonio Dimas at the end of the civil war, as members of the general commissariat, seeking recognition and administrative permission to continue with the activities of the exploradores, but never received the desired response. He took charge of the Exploradores de Expaña after the resignation of Juan Antonio Dimas, at the end of 1940.[160] In 1951, he was a member of the national commission for the reorganization of Spanish Scouting, together with Enrique Genovés Guillén and Víctor José Jiménez y Malo de Molina, all three representing the Exploradores de España.[161] He was the last active commissioner of the original constitution, and continued in his position as such on the organizing commission to attempt the legalization of the Asociación de Scouts de España in March 1962.[162] In 1969, he entered the Order of Beneficence receiving honors with white badge and second class Cross category.[163] A regular contributor to the magazine Escuela Española, he was the author of La educación en régimen de internado.[164] Gallery
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