Giulio Cesare Uccelini
Giulio Cesare Uccelini was a leading figure in Catholic Scouting in Lombardy and in the Italian resistance movement through the end of World War II.
Uccellini joined Scouting around 1917, when, despite the opposition of his father, he entered the Milan group II ASCI. Driven by a strong civic and religious sense, he renounced his professional career in the Bank of Italy and the creation of a family to dedicate his life to Scouting, even after 1928, when the fascist laws outlawed the Scout movement.
Stray Eagles
When it was decreed that ASCI members must wear the Opera Nazionale Balilla on their uniforms in 1927, Uccellini refused, and again refused to hand over the ASCI insignia when Scouting was finally suppressed in 1928.Uccellini did not accept the end of Scouting, and continued to keep his group alive clandestinely with some members, which he named :it:Aquile randagie "Stray Eagles". He continued to pursue his ideas of freedom and non-violence, serving as a courageous role model, continuing in his efforts even after the police had beaten him up, causing serious hearing damage.
His group, which in the meantime had also welcomed new members and Scouts belonging to the other groups now dissolved, continued the clandestine activities, with annual summer camps and also participating in the 5th World Scout Jamboree in Vogelenzang, Netherlands. On August 9, 1937, Uccellini met 81-year-old Robert Baden-Powell, founder of the movement, who was impressed by the story of the Stray Eagles and urged Uccellini to continue his activities.
During the 6th World Scout Jamboree, held in Moisson, France in 1947, Uccellini received the nickname "Bad Boy" from J.S. Wilson, then director of the World Scout Bureau.