During this Jubilee Jamboree,
Scout leader and
radio ham Les Mitchell announced his idea of the
Jamboree on the Air allowing Scouts worldwide who were unable to attend to experience the event over the radio and to hold annual radio "meets". The 1957 event was the first Jamboree that had been held in England to have its own
commemorative postage stamps produced by the
General Post Office. In conjunction with the Jamboree the Scouting Association promoted a week-long
Gang Show at the Hippodrome Theatre in central Birmingham between 5 August and 10 August, led by
Ralph Reader and featuring the full 150 strong cast from his London-based Gang Show. Buses were provided each evening to bus up to 500 campers into the city centre for the show. Daily rail excursion charter trains were laid on to transport the international Scouts on sight-seeing trips to various British cities, including
Nottingham,
Leicester,
Swindon,
Loughborough,
Stoke-on-Trent,
London and
Cardiff. One day Queen Elizabeth visited the camp hospital where many were being treated for the flu. The event is commemorated by a short stone pillar in the centre of Sutton Park that still stands near the site of Lady Baden-Powell's closing address. The weather during the 12 days ranged from an oppressive summer heatwave to two days of torrential rain that turned many pathways into quagmires. Many of the American Boy Scouts were fortunate in that the US Air Force brought in cots to avoid sleeping in water that flooded many campsites.. The
Cinema Museum in London holds film of the Jamboree. ==Gallery==