In 1937, a group of Madison businessmen watched a performance held at the UW Stock Pavilion by a 10 year old boy scout drum and bugle corps called the Racine Scouts. Impressed by their performance and the possibilities of a highly entertaining youth activity for area young men, they decided that Madison should have a scout drum & bugle corps too.
The men, E.J. Hess, Robert Gerry, Thomas Jones, Arthur May, and Robert Hesse, gave life to the Madison Boy Scout Drum & Bugle Corps organization, which soon after held it's first rehearsal on February 8, 1938 in the basement of the Christ Presbyterian Church with equipment borrowed from the Masons.
Armed with official Boy Scout uniforms, regulation Army-issue G bugles, a Snare, Tenor, & Bass drum and a broomstick for a drum major's baton, the Scouts were born. E. J. Hess became the first corps director, but shortly after Clarence H. Beebe, Scoutmaster of Troop 20, was appointed quartermaster and executive director of the Madison Scouts Drum & Bugle Corps. "C.H." as he was known to the entire troop became the inspiration and driving force behind the corps for the next thirty years.
It was a relatively inauspicious beginning for what was to become one of the premier youth organizations not only in the city of Madison, but also the state of Wisconsin. Over time it would evolve into one of the finest drum and bugle corps in the activity and gain a reputation of excellence both nationally and worldwide.
The 2008 season marks the 70th anniversary of the Madison Scouts. With two DCI world championships to their name and over 5000 alumni, the Scouts continue to stay true to their mission of personal development through the rigors of competitive and creative drum corps.