William Boyd Kennedy ShawOBE (26 October 1901 – 23 April 1979) was a British desert explorer, botanist, archaeologist and soldier. During the Second World War he served with the British Army's Long Range Desert Group, and the Special Air Service Regiment. He was known, variously as Bill Shaw or Bill Kennedy-Shaw, but preferred the latter form of his name, which he always used in his writings.
In the 1920s and 1930s Kennedy-Shaw contributed to the exploration of the Western Desert in the area around the south-western corner of modern Egypt with his particular interest and skills as a botanist, archaeologist and navigator. He made four major trips:
In October 1930 Kennedy-Shaw accompanied Ralph Alger Bagnold on a trip from Cairo to Ain Dalla, into the Sand Sea, past Ammonite hill to the Gilf Kebir, south to Uweinat and on to Wadi Halfa, returning via the Arba'in slave road via Salima oasis, Kharga and then Aysut.
In 1935 Kennedy-Shaw set out from Cairo again on 14 January with Colonel G. A. Strutt and Mrs. Strutt, Lieut. R. N. Harding Newman (Royal Tank Corps), M. H. Mason, R. E. McEuen, this time in three Model 46 Ford trucks, first arriving at Gilf Kebir, onto Wadi Halfa, Grassy Valley, El Fasher (in search of medical aid after a serious fall by Colonel Strutt. The remaining party returned to Wadi Hawa for a thorough investigation of the area. Then onto Selima, to Uweinat, into the Sand Sea and through to Siwa before returning to Cairo on April 9, covering in all about 6300 miles (10140km). Kennedy-Shaw's paper and photographs were presented at the Royal Geographical Society in January, 1936 and published in their quarterly journal.[5]
From 1944 to 1945 he served as the GSO 2 (Intelligence) at the SAS Brigade's Headquarters in the North-West Europe Campaign.
Post-war life
He wrote one of the first books on the LRDG, entitled The Long Range Desert Group (1945),[6] which was subject to pre-publication approval by the War Office who required changes to be made to the text; in particular the codenames of the operations he described and some real names of individuals involved in special operations. He also wrote several articles that were published in the Journal of the Royal Geographical Society. (The Greenhill Military Paperbacks edition of his book contains supplementary notes on his life and has updating amendments to his original text, commissioned by the publisher from authorities on the subject, which notes and explains the original excisions).