In 1908–09, Pantyukhov became acquainted with the works of
Lord Baden-Powell and decided to try these ideas on Russian soil. He organized the first Russian Scout troop
Beaver (,
Bobr) in
Pavlovsk, a town near
Tsarskoye Selo, on 30 April 1909. In the winter of 1910–11 Pantyukhov met Baden-Powell in
Saint Petersburg and then visited Scout organisations in
England, the
Netherlands,
Sweden and
Denmark. On his return, he wrote the first Russian Scouting books "Памятка Юного Разведчика" (Handbook for the Young Scout) and "В гостях у Бой-скаутов" (Visiting the Boy Scouts) (both 1912). In 1913, he wrote a book named "Спутник Бойскаута" (The Boy Scout Companion). Pantyukhov met
Nicholas II and gifted a Scouting badge for
Tsarevich Alexei, who formally became a Scout. In 1914, Pantyukhov established a society called
Russian Scout (,
Russkiy Skaut). The first Russian Scout campfire was lit in the woods of Pavlovsk Park. A Russian Scout song exists to remember this event.
Scouting spread rapidly across Russia and into
Siberia, and by 1916 there were about 50,000 Scouts in Russia. During
World War I, Pantyukhov received a
Cross of St. George, was treated in
Crimea and became the commander of the "Third
Moscow School of
Praporshchiks". During the
October Revolution he was the leader of the cadets who unsuccessfully defended the
Kremlin from
Bolsheviks. In 1919 in
Novocherkassk (controlled at the time by the
White Army), Pantyukhov was unanimously elected the Chief Scout of Russia. ==Disbandment and banning of Russian Scouting==