The
'Hash House' was the mildly derogative nickname given (for its
unimaginative, monotonous food) to the Selangor Club Chambers,
by the British Civil Servants and businessmen who lived and dined
there. Originally, the ground floor housed the main Selangor Club
dining room, and between the two World Wars it became a social
center of the times, used regularly for lunch time meals by the
members who worked in the immediate vicinity.
Situated close to and
behind the present Selangor Club, it's function changed after independence
and it became a key office for the local Water Board, as it was
the place where all Kuala Lumpur (K.L.) residents came to pay their
water bills. Sadly, it gave way to the relentless march of time
around 1964, being bulldozed to the ground under the north-bound
lane Jalan Kuching. The buildings housing the original stables and
servants quarters are still in existence.
Ancient
Harriers
The idea of Harriers chasing paper was not new
to Malaya in 1938, as there had been such clubs before in Kuala
Lumpur and Johore Bahru, and there were clubs in existence in
Malacca and Ipoh (the Kinta Harriers) at the time. "Horse"
Thomson (one of the KLH3 founding fathers) recalled being invited
on a run, shortly after his arrival in Johore Bahru in 1932, which
chased a paper trail and followed basic Hash rules every week
but was so magically organized that it had no name. The club flourished
in the early 1930's but is believed to have died out around 1935.
The other branch of our ancestry comes from Malacca,
where A. S. ('G') Gispert was posted in 1937 and joined a club
called the Springgit Harriers, who also operated weekly under
Hash rules and are believed to have been formed in 1935. Some
months later, 'Torch' Bennett visited him and came as a guest
on a few runs.
Hash
House Harriers
By 1938, Thomson, Lee, and Gispert had all moved
to K.L. and founded their own club, following the rules they had
learnt elsewhere. The principal original members were:

A.
S. ('G') Gispert
Cecil Lee
'Horse' Thomson
Torch' Bennett
Eric Galvin
H.M. Doig
Soon joined by others, including:
Frank Woodward
Philip Wickens
Lew Davidson
John Wyatt-Smith
M. C. Hay
I t is not clear that the club actually had a
name at the very beginning, but Gispert is credited with proposing
the 'Hash House Harriers' when the Registrar of Societies required
the gathering to be legally registered.
'Torch' Bennett technically missed being a founder
member, because he was then on leave, bout on his return he introduced
the first necessary organization - a bank account, a balance sheet
and some system. More importantly, he seems, with Philip Wickens
who joined later in 1939, to have helped to keep things going
immediately after the war.
Sadly, Gispert had only a short time with his
extraordinary creation, being killed in the fighting on Singapore
Island on February 11th, 1942, whilst serving with the Argylls.
But with the exception of Philip Wickens who died in 1981, and
Lew Davidson who died very recently, the rest of the hardy band
of hashers hare still with us and the KL hash House Harriers keeps
in touch with them all.
The founding members were all British, although
Gispert was actually Spanish in origin, his parents having migrated
to London some time before he was born. Extraordinarily both he
and Bennett were accountants, as were Paul Barnard and Jack Bridewell
who made a significant contribution to our activities of later
years. Some Hash psychiatrist should investigate where this work
leads to extreme forms of escapism.
The HHH duly celebrated it 100th run on 15 August
1941, but only 17 runs later was forced into temporary hibernation
by the arrival of the Japanese.
Postwar
Rebirth
Post World War II, it was nearly 12 months before
the survivors reassembled. 'Torch' Bennett put in a claim for
the lost hash mugs, a tin bath and two old bags, on the fund set
up with the proceeds from confiscated Japanese property and run
No. 1 was a trot around the race-course in August, 1946. Subsequent
to the 1,000th post war run the celebrations surround it were
considered to be such a success that the 117 official pre-war
runs were added to the total as we could celebrate the 2,000th
run as soon as possible.
With the advent of the Emergency in 1948, the
Hash was automatically in bad official odor, as their activities
were generally illegal in terms of the curfew imposed on most
of the areas surround Kuala Lumpur and in the years 1948-51, they
maintained a precarious existence at best. The turn round came
with the famous bandit incident at Cheras.
This has been widely misreported, but what actually
happened was that below where the Lady Templer Hospital is now,
in an area that was then rubber and belukar, the Hares on a darkening
and rainy evening came across some men wrapped in ground sheets
sleeping on the ground. The following pack found the bandits on
their feet but someone, in the general confusion nobody got hurt.
One member ran to Cheras Police Station and raised the alarm;
the army laid ambushes on tracks leading out of the area and first
thing the following morning bagged three bandits trying to break
out. One of them was found to have a substantial price on his
head and the bounty was shared among the non-government employees
on the run (government servants were not allowed to participate
in such rewards).
Other colorful incidents related by Cecil Lee,
include how 'Torch' Bennett once nearly drowned in quicksand,
and how on one memorable occasion the erstwhile unathletic 'G'
was actually leading the pack: sadly his moment of glory was short
lived as the paper trail turned to be false. Swimming would seem
to be an unofficial prerequisite to all Hashmen too, for Cecil
remembers having had to swim across a mining pool in order to
get home after being lost on one occasion, and on another it is
reported that several Hashmen ran in to a stream where bathed
some unsuspecting Malay maidens. The girls screamed; their menfolk
came hurtling to the rescue with the unsheathed parangs flashing,
and the errant Hashmen broke land speed records in the eagerness
to clear the scene.
The
Hash Spreads Out
The second Hash Chapter was founded in Singapore
in 1962, note: The Royal Italian Bordighera Hash was begun in
the late '40s but died by the late '50s. It was later resurected
by members of the Milan H3 followed by Kuching in 1963, Brunei,
Kota Kinabalu and Ipoh in 1964, Penang in 1965, and Perth was
the first outside Malaysia and Singapore in 1967. Even by the
time of K.L. 1,500th run in 1974 the total was only 35, so the
subsequent explosion has been spectacular indeed. The 1992 international
list will total around 1,100 clubs in over 135 countries and all
continents (including Antarctica) where the hash format is often
adapted to environments very different from the near rows of Malaysian
rubber trees amongst which it was conceived. Kabul HHH understandably
foundered, but what can it be like to hash in Sinai, Peking, Addis
Ababa or the Falkland Islands? The aforementioned second hash
dating back to 1962 was founded in Singapore by Ian Cumming who
is still actively hashing with the New York H3. He is also a primary
contributor to every hash songbook.
Interhash
The first attempt at an Interhash get-together was the K.L. 1,000th
post-war run in 1966, and the spectacular 1500th run in 1973 when
attendance was something over 300. Interhash 1978 in Hong Kong
broke new ground with an attendance around 800; Interhashes 1980
and 1982 were credited with 1,200 - 1,300; Interhash 1984 with
rather more Interhash 1986 broke the 2,000 barrier with 2,143.
Attendance at Bali for Interhash 1988 was reported
to bet between 2,600 and 2,700. Interhash 1990 in Manila was affected
by the then current state of emergency in the country, but nevertheless
some 1,600 intrepid Hashers were let loose in Manila and survived
to tell the tale.
Interhash 1992 in Phuket, Thailand does not seem
to be affected by the recent unhappy turmoil in Bangkok and, judging
by reported registrations the numbers are set to pass 3,000. Interhash
1994 in New Zealand drew nearly 4,000, Interhash 1996 in Cyprus
drew 6,000 and Interhash 1998 in Kuala Lumpur had over 7,000 participants.
Written in 1992 by Mike Lyons from the copious
research material prepared by John Duncan. Transcribed in 1994
by Tom "Self-Executing Officer" Moore, On-Sec, Boston
H3, and edited by Chas. "ZiPpY tC" Baumerich, On-Sec,
Pikes Peak H4.