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Branch History
The Scottish Pipe Band Association began in 1930 in Glasgow in response
to a real need for a governing body to lay down rules and regulations
for the control and efficient running of Pipe Band Contests. A code of
rules was decided on for the running of the contests, a panel of
competent adjudicators appointed along with an administrative structure
to co-ordinate all the facets. The Pipe Band Association soon won the
acclaim of all progressive bands.
A new harmony now emerged and with it the SPBA prospered. A system of
marking and score sheets was evolved so that the adjudicators could
indicate the good or faulty parts of each performance - bands were
graded in the early days into three grades and this system continues to
the present day when we have six grades 1, 2, 3, 4, Juvenile and Novice
Juvenile in accordance with ability, and each year an advisory committee
meets to review and reassess the bands in their various grades. United Kingdom
membership of the association is currently around 500 bands, over and
above this there are literally hundreds more bands who enjoy affiliated
membership through overseas Pipe Band Associations.
In 1964, bands in the south of England felt the need to become part of
the organisation. A meeting of interested bands was arranged at the
Brown Bear public house in Holborn, London when executive members from
the SPBA headquarters in Glasgow attended. As a result of this meeting, 12
bands formed themselves into the London and South of England Branch of
the SPBA.
At the time of writing, there are over 30 member bands, an indication of the
growth in England can be assessed when one learns that in 1960 there
were two branches and five bands in full membership, today there are
four branches with almost one hundred member bands.
In 1980, the 50th Jubilee year of the Association,
The Queen graciously granted permission for the Association to change
it's title to the Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association. To mark this
honour, our Jubilee branches arranged special performances. The London
and South of England Branch performed various displays, culminating with the
Lord Mayor's Show in London where a massed band of 600 pipers and
drummers marched in the parade.
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