In 1983 Bruce Giddings was working for Ford Tractor plant and found himself working overseas in Singapore. He stumbled across a group of Ex pats who were part of a local group called “Singapore Hash House Harriers”
“Hashers” as they are known are drinkers with a running problem. They usually gather weekly for a short hare and hounds style trail followed by a few drinks afterwards at a bar or pub.
When Bruce returned to the UK in June 1984 he set up a new hash “Chapter” with a few work colleagues from the tractor plant in Basildon, as he lived in Danbury Essex, the Danbury Hash House Harriers was born and the 1st trail was from Boreham House where Fords had a social club.
After several trails around the footpaths of Danbury it was decided that they needed to spread the word and move further afield. They held an AGPU (Annual General P1ss Up)in December 1984 and Essex Hash House Harriers emerged. Their first trail was from The Generals Arms in Great Baddow, a venue revisited for their 30thBirthday run in 2014.
A full detailed history of EH3 can be found here
Hashing was born in 1938 in Selangor, in Kuala Lumpur in what is now Malaysia. A group of British colonial officers and expatriates began meeting on Monday evenings to rid themselves of the excesses of the previous weekend by running in a fashion patterned after the traditional British paper chase or "hare and hounds". They chose the name "Hash House Harriers" after the Selangor Club Annex, where the original hashers dined, and which they had nicknamed the "Hash House" owing to its lacklustre food. The particular genius of the founding father, A S Ignatius Gispert, nicknamed "G", was to make the traditional hare & hounds running more fun for the main pack by finding a way of making it non-competitive.
Sadly ‘G’ died defending Singapore against the invading Japanese forces in 1942 however the club continued. After the war, the authorities in Kuala Lumpur required all clubs to publish a constitution. The objectives of the Hash House Harriers were recorded as being:
Subsequently, as original members took on other assignments or repatriated, new chapters were formed and so the hash began to spread. In 1962, Ian Cumming founded the second major chapter in Singapore. Hashing continued to spread through the Far East and the South Pacific, Europe, North America, expanding rapidly during the mid-1970s.
By 2000 there were 1570 active hash clubs in 184 countries…
The development of the internet has made it much easier to contact clubs and so many seasoned hashers make a point of connecting up with local clubs whenever they travel-nothing can beat a hash as a way to find your bearings in a new location.
Most clubs periodically run celebration events when they invite members of other clubs to join them for a weekend. On a grander scale, there is a biennial UK Nash Hash and even Interhashes, attended by hashers from all over the globe.
Further information about Hashing can be found through the following links
Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hash_House_Harriers
Guardian article - https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/the-running-blog/2013/jun/18/hashing-club-drinking-running-fitness
Essex Hash House Harriers
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