Piping Press

History: P/M Speedy, Scots Guards, and a Libyan Band he Trained During WW2

Further to researcher Liz Gardner’s article on the unknown Libyan Pipe Band, I can forward the following information.

The band was known as the Senoussi Pipe Band of the Cyrenaican Defence Forces and was taught by Pipe-Major William Speedy of the 2nd Battalion Scots Guards. 

By Ron Abbott

Pipe-Major 3184097 William Butler ‘Jock’ Speedy was born in Polwarth [near Duns, Scottish Borders] in 1902 and died in London in 1969.  He was P/M of the 2nd Btn. SG between 1941 and 1943.

There is an article about the band and P/M Speedy in the 7th September 1943 edition of the Berwickshire News & General Advertiser.

I surfaced this photo of the band he taught a couple of years ago and copied it for my own research purposes:

The Berwickshire News article reads: ‘The recently formed pipe, bugle and drum band of the Senoussi Arabs of the Cyrenaican Defence Forces, trained by a Scot, was greeted with rousing cheers from the Arabs when it made its first public appearance in the streets of Barce, Libya.

‘The band beat ‘Retreat’ and marched past the GOC Cyrenaica who took the salute. The band was trained by Pipe Major William Speedy, Scots Guards, whose home is at Westlock, Coldingham [Scottish Borders].



‘This is the first official mention of the Cyrenaican Defence Force parading in public. It has been formed and trained by British officers and NCOs from locally trained Senoussis who have throughout the war, despite Italian propaganda and oppression, been enthusiastically pro-British.

‘Pipe Major Speedy joined the Scots Guards as a piper in 1925 and had seen service in China and Palestine before the outbreak of war. In the Libya campaign in 1941 he was twice wounded. In 1940 he was made Pipe Major.

‘He has had several meetings with his sister who is a nursing sister in a military hospital in Palestine.’


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