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The HASH HOUSE HARRIERS is a social club of runners
that have been described as "a drinking club with a
running problem." Ex-pat British businessmen, accountants,
lawyers, civil servants, etc., started the HASH in 1938
in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
It is a club based on the old English game of hares and
hounds where one or two members would be given several minutes
head start and would drop shredded paper as the "scent".
The hounds would then follow, after the prescribed time,
and attempt to catch the hares. The hares would lay the
trail in a straight or obvious line, but then would stop
laying trail and run off in another direction and begin
laying the trail after 100 meters or so. When the hounds
discovered that they were no longer on trail, they would
fan out in all directions in search of the "scent"
and would call to the others when the trail was once again
discovered.
The founder of the HASH, A.S."G" Gispert, in 1937
discovered the Springgit Harriers, one of the paperchase
clubs in Malacca. He introduced Ronald "Torch"
Bennett to the concept and the stage was set.
When "G" returned to Kuala Lumpur in 1938, he
became a member of the Federated Malay States Volunteer
Reserves, which trained on Mondays. "G" and many
of the other ex-pat Brits were housed in barracks in the
Royal Selangor Club where he and "Torch" would
often discuss starting a harrier club in KL (Kuala Lumpur).
Finally in about December of 1938, "G" convinced
about a dozen others to follow his inaugural paper trail.
Gispert then suggested the name of HASH HOUSE HARRIERS in
mock allusion to the mess at the Selangor Club, where many
of them dined. The runs were held Monday evenings after
reserve training and were followed by refreshment of Tiger
beer.
A.S."G" Gispert was killed in battle defending
Singapore from the Japanese at 0400 hours 11 February 1942.
The HASH has grown from those humble beginnings to include
thousands of chapters and tens of thousands of hashers worldwide.
Much of the information presented above comes from the book
"On On! Run #2 Hash House Harriers 1938-1992"
by Harrier International and the late Tim "Magic"
Hughes, Phhh.D.
For more history of the Hash House Harriers social club,
click
here.
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