Most this recount has been shamelessly stolen from
Hazukashii's GoToTheHash.net and the
images from ZiPpY's Harrier.net
check out their information loaded sites
I happened across
this article while flying from the IPOH post-lube back to Kuala Lumpur after
World InterHash 1998 (In the Malaysian Airlines Magazine). It is the best
article I have seen on the origin of hashing. It was no doubt relayed from
someone over a beer in the Selangor Club.
On-On and Enjoy,
Hazukashii
The celebrated running event has a colorful history. The original idea was
to mimic the Hare and Hounds or Fox and Hounds style chases that have been
around for centuries in one form or another. Some "gentle-men" substituted
men for the game in an effort to add something different to the sport. There
is evidence of this in colonial America as well as in England. It seemed a
logical development then, to substitute the hounds with runners as well.
Men, not as well endowed as dogs with a sense of smell, required a trail of
some sort to track their quarry. Paper seemed the ideal solution. This sport
was well entrenched long before these sportsmen became known as "hashers"
and the sport was referred to as Hounds and Hares or the Paper Chase.

The Hash House Harriers had its humble beginnings in 1938 with an Englishman
named Albert Stephen Ignatius Gispert, in what is now Malaysia. Having a
fondness for the "paper chase," he gathered together a group of expatriates
- including Cecil Lee, "Horse" Thomson and "Torch" Bennett - to form a group
in Kuala Lumpur that would later become a worldwide legacy. The fraternity
received its name from the Selangor Club Chambers, which due to its lack
lustre food was commonly referred to as the "Hash House."

A.S. Gispert a.k.a.
"G"
Almost a dozen runs took place, although attendance could sometimes be
counted on one hand. The sport was cut short during World War II, but then
re-established when peace returned. It was some time before the
international phenomena we are familiar with today began spreading around
the world. A hash was formed in 1947 in Bordighera, Italy (near Milan) by
some former members of the original Hash House Harriers. It ceased
operations for many years but was reborn in 1984 and is now quite alive and
well as the Royal Milan and Bordighera HHH.
It wasn't until 1962 that the next official group was formed in Singapore.
The Singapore HHH was slowly followed by others until by the 1,500th postwar
run in 1973, there were 35 known hashes around the world. This figure
climbed into the hundreds by the 1980's and there are now well over 1,300
active hashes.
The main difference between hash groups is their emphasis on the sporting
versus social aspects of hashing. Some choose to maintain the tradition of a
live hare hash chasing runners while they lay a trail after being given a
few minutes head start. They thrill in the hunt the occasional catch and the
notion that there is a real pursuit in progress during the event.
Other hashes have shunned the competitive nature of the live hare hashes,
pre-laying the trail with a number of marks designed to keep the pack
together. These gathering checks and other delaying marks allow the hashers
of the dead hare hashes to sing and make merry from point to point,
emphasizing the social aspects of the sport.
Regardless the event, hashing knows no age boundaries, with family hashes
and children's hashes, as well as members from all ages, with hashers in
their 70's or even older. So there's no reason to not join. As one popular
Hash House Harriers' motto goes: "If you've half a mind to join the hash,
that's all you need!"


This letter was addressed to the Kuala Lumpur HHH in 1958 by Cecil
Lee, one of the co-founders of the Hash House Harriers. He was a regular
harrier 1938-40, and after the war, 1946-51, then in Borneo for three years
before returning to KL to finish his hashing 1954-57.
"The Hash House Harriers were founded in a moment of post-prandial
inspiration at the Selangor Club Chambers, about 1937/38, by the inmates,
who included myself, E.J. Galvin, H.M. Doig, and AS Gispert. Gispert was the
real founder – a man of great wit and charm, who was killed on Singapore
Island in February 1942 whilst serving with the Argylls, having only just
returned from leave in Australia to rejoin the volunteers. I am glad of this
opportunity to salute his memory. He was a splendid fellow, and would be
happy to know the Harriers are still going strong, and are as merry and
bright as ever - or more so. Gispert was not an athlete, and stress was laid
as much on the subsequent refreshment etc. as on the pure and austere
running. It was non-competitive, and abounded in slow packs. Life was then
conservative rather than competitive.
The name was a mock allusion to the institution that housed and fed us.
Later "Torch" Bennett returned from leave, and produced order out of chaos -
a bank account, balance sheet and some system. But we pride ourselves on
being rather disorganised - or the minimum organization sufficed. The
original joint masters were myself and "Horse" Thompson, still running
somewhere – a past-master at short-cuts and the conservation of energy.
Celebrations were held in various places, and the first
was in what is now the Legislative Council, then the Volunteer Mess. The
oratory, I recall, was much the same as now.

The Royal Selangor
Club Chambers (Volunteer Mess) circa1938 a.k.a. The Hash House
Llew Davidson is an old member. Morris Edgar was one, but
apart from Llew and John Wyatt-Smith, I do not think there are any more
antediluvians still running. Philip Wickens was also one who kept us going
post-war.
We started up again after the war due to Torch Bennett who discovered a Bank
Balance and put in a claim for War Damage on one tin bath, and two dozen
mugs, and possibly two old bags (not members). We started by a small run in
reduced circumstances around the race-course then the horses were not much
better.
The Emergency cramped our style but did not diminish our activities, and we
were called in for information on various by-ways in Selangor, but our
period of usefulness to MI5 was brief, and our information probably otiose.
But the hares ran into two Bandits at Cheras, who were later copped.
An Irish accountant, Kennedy, drew up the Rules we had to register as a
club, and he seems to have preserved the old traditions just as you do now."
Selemat tinggal HHH
Cecil Lee
KUALA LUMPUR
October 24, 1958