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Follow Me, Boys! 1966

It captures the joy and heartbreak of being America’s beloved hometown hero. Lem Siddons, a traveling musician who longs to become a lawyer, settles in a small town and works as a stockboy in the general store. To fit in, he volunteers as scoutmaster of the new Troop 1. As he grows attached to the scouts, his legal dreams fade and he finds fulfillment guiding the town’s youth.

It captures the joy and heartbreak of being America’s beloved hometown hero. Lem Siddons, a traveling musician who longs to become a lawyer, settles in a small town and works as a stockboy in the general store. To fit in, he volunteers as scoutmaster of the new Troop 1. As he grows attached to the scouts, his legal dreams fade and he finds fulfillment guiding the town’s youth.

Does Follow Me, Boys! have end credit scenes?

No!

Follow Me, Boys! does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Take the Ultimate Follow Me, Boys! Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of Follow Me, Boys! with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


Follow Me, Boys! Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 1966 film *Follow Me, Boys!* with these ten questions covering characters, plot points, and behind‑the‑scenes details.

What instrument does Lemuel Siddons play before becoming a Scoutmaster?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Follow Me, Boys!

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Read the complete plot summary of Follow Me, Boys!, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


“In 1930, Lemuel Siddons, a saxophonist in a traveling band, dreams of becoming a lawyer. When the band’s bus rolls into the small town of Hickory, he abruptly quits the road and takes a clerical job in the general store owned by John Everett Hughes. At a town civic meeting, Vida Downey catches his eye—the bank teller he first saw on his first day in town—and he begins courting her, even as she trims the town’s youth programs, leaving only the Boy Scouts to keep the boys off the streets. He volunteers to become Scoutmaster of Troop 1, hoping to guide the town’s young people toward steadier lives.

Over time, Lem grows into an all-around natural leader, choosing to invest in the boys’ growth rather than chase his old dream of law school. Meanwhile, the town’s troublemaker, Whitey (Edward White Jr.), refuses to join the troop. One night, while Lem and Vida are on a date, they catch Whitey stealing from Hughes’ store after hours. Whitey falls and sprains his ankle, and Lem patches him up using techniques from the Boy Scout Handbook. Impressed, Whitey secretly steals the book, and Lem allows it, recognizing his own past self in the boy. One night, Lem invites Whitey’s father, Edward White, Sr., to parents’ night at the Scout meeting place on the lake property owned by Hetty Seibert, the bank’s owner and Ralph Hastings’ aunt. Edward arrives drunk and embarrasses Whitey, causing him to quit the troop. Yet Edward dies later that night of alcohol poisoning, leaving Lem and Vida to adopt Whitey.

Years later, in 1944, Lem is out with his troop when he is accidentally captured by the United States Army during a war game in the area. He is mistaken for a spy because of his Scout gear, and he cannot prove he is a Scoutmaster after a military captain asks him to tie a sheepshank—the one knot he never learned. Across the lake, Troop 1 fires their morning cannon, signaling the war-game attack. The scouts shelter in a staged base and, with quick thinking and improvised action, they manage to capture a tank using explosive squibs, freeing Lem from an embarrassing moment of captivity.

Back at the lake, Lem and the troop learn that Ralph Hastings is suing Hetty Seibert over the lake property, claiming she is mentally unstable and needs a guardian to manage her finances. Although Lem never passed the bar, he is allowed to participate as an interested party and question Hetty on the stand. His probing reveals that the property was once the site of her family cottage, which burned down in September 1918, two days after she learned her sons were killed in France. Hetty explains she permitted the troop to meet there because the boys reminded her of her late sons, and she shows that she understands Ralph’s scheme to use the land as a tax haven. Hetty wins the case, and the troop is allowed to keep the property.

On September 1, 1945, Lem and Vida celebrate Hughes’ birthday by listening to Harry S. Truman announce the end of the war over the radio. Whitey, now a captain in the army, returns to Hickory to introduce Lem and Vida to his wife, Nora, an army nurse Nora White. In 1950, Hughes passes away, leaving the store to Lem and Vida. Because Lem’s health prevents him from continuing as Scoutmaster, the town honors his two decades of service with a surprise celebration on October 2, 1950, and dedicates Hetty’s property as Camp Siddons in Lem’s honor.”

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Follow Me, Boys! Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


slimehousetownjazz bandbusstepfather stepson relationshipscoutmasterfamily relationshipsillnessgovernorgenerationaldecadesscoutingchildrenworld war twowar gamerescueparadeinfertilitycompetency hearingalcoholic fatheradoptionboy scoutorphanbased on book
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