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Yorihiro Matsudaira : ウィキペディア英語版 | Yorihiro Matsudaira
Count (August 13, 1909 – February 23, 1990), Riji of Hongō Gakuen, who was the descendant of the feudal lord of the former Takamatsu domain, served as the International Commissioner of the Boy Scouts of Japan as well as president of the Boy Scouts Council of Kagawa. He was one of the original founders of Japanese Scouting in 1922. Count Matsudaira, whose namesake was a daimyo of the late Edo period, the ninth lord of Takamatsu, was the 13th head of the Matsudaira family. He established a troop in Tokyo, now Gakushūin Group 1 in Toshima. He had an extended tour of the United States, during which he was a leader of the delegation of 22 Japanese Boy Scouts to the National Jamboree of the Boy Scouts of America, held at Irvine Ranch in southern California in July 1953 and later spent a month at the Schiff Scout Reservation in New Jersey attending the national training school for Scout executives. He also visited the Arthur A. Schuck, Chief Scout Executive at the national office of the Boy Scouts of America in New York City. In 1981, Matsudaira was awarded the 149th ''Bronze Wolf'', the only distinction of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, awarded by the World Scout Committee for exceptional services to world Scouting, at the 28th World Scout Conference. As his son Yoritake Matsudaira received the award in 2012, this is the first and thus far only time a father and son have both been awarded the Bronze Wolf. ==References==
*Dr. László Nagy, ''250 Million Scouts'', the World Scout Foundation and Dartnell Publishers, 1985, complete list through 1981, from which the French Scoutopedia article is sourced
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