About VHPBA
Welcome to the Victorian Highland Pipe Band Association. The Victorian Highland Pipe Band Association, established in 1924, is the oldest pipe band association in the world, and now functions to support the Victorian Branch of the A.P.B.A. Inc and the bands of that branch.
The V.H.P.B.A. Inc. (the State Association formerly responsible for everyday band activities) remains active as an administrative facility to support the branch.
Sir Rupert Hamer AC, KCMG, ED was the first Chieftain of the V.H.P.B.A. and remained active in his support of the Association until his death in 2004. More recently, The Hon. Ted Baillieu MLA accepted an invitation to the appointment of Chieftain, and Mr Baillieu too actively supports Pipe Bands Victoria in its endeavours and goals.
List of Office Bearers
Life Members
2020 Funding Program for Education & Training
Applications are now open for a new Victorian Highland Pipe Band Association education and training program that will have two funding rounds in 2020.
A maximum of $5000 is available in each round to support initiatives that will benefit pipers, drummers and drum majors. The attached memo and application forms contain full details of the program.
Grants under the Funding Program will be available only by application addressing the program guidelines and criteria and able to demonstrate a benefit to the pipe band movement in Victoria.
Applications for round one close on 2 March for projects between April and June.
MEMO-VHPBA FUNDING PROGRAM FOR EDUCATION AND TRAINING
VHPBA FUNDING PROGRAM 2020 application forms
Historical Notes
Groups interested in the maintenance of Scottish traditions and music can be traced back to the Sydney of the 1820s at least, and while there is no continuous history of Scottish activities since then, there are flashes of information until late last century. Expatriate Scots, often under the aegis of Vice-Regal Scots, conducted various activities to keep fresh the old traditions in the somewhat different surroundings of Australia.
Highland Gatherings and musical contests also go back a long way — with continuity from the 1850s. Pipe bands appear in the last part of the nineteenth century. Initially as Scottish interest groups were brought into association by such bodies as the Victorian Scottish Union, the pipe bands joined with the dancers and the other groups. From time to time there was a desire to have control of pipe band affairs, and to shake free of the interference of other groups, however well meant it was.
By the 1920s there was, in Victoria, a surge of feeling within the bands that the time had come. This was crystallised by Drum Major Lew Zilles, later Maj. L. L. Zilles, OAM, ED, at the Maryborough Highland Gathering in 1924, using a platform made available by the promoters. Discussions followed, and a meeting was held in Geelong on 12th April 1924, at which the Victorian Highland Pipe Band Association was formed, the first such association wholly for the interests of pipe bands in the world — some years ahead of the Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association itself. Lew remained a respected and active figure until his death in 1998 at the age of 94; he judged his last contest at the fine age of 88.
Its first tasks were the establishment of uniform contest rules, and the use of qualified judges, not the gentlemen friends of the various organisers as tended to be the case beforehand.
As time passed, bands in other States also joined, and by the 1950s the Victorian Association had member bands in New South Wales, South Australia and Tasmania as well as Victoria. However, during the 1950s Associations were formed in New South Wales, South Australia and Queensland. The Tasmanian and Western Australian Associations followed later.
By 1960 the desirability of a national uniformity of contest rules was evident, and there was a desire to identify a real and generally accepted national championships. An initial meeting between representatives of the New South Wales and Victorian Associations was fruitful, and the Australian Federation of Pipe Associations was formed. In due course, all six State Associations joined the Federation.
The Federation controlled the contest rules for national championships only, and discussed other matters, but in these effective authority remained with the State bodies. Probably, this fairly loose union was the best that communications and perhaps a degree of distrust of other people interfering in one’s home area allowed at that time.
The first Chieftain of the Federation was the then Prime Minister, the Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Menzies, K.T., C.H., Q.C. After his death, Mr G. Ewen Masson, OAM, former President of the South Australian Association and of the Federation, was appointed Chieftain and he holds office still.
As time passed the degree of cohesion improved. Greater knowledge of the people involved was a factor, as was the steady increase in travel of bands and individuals around our vast country. As time passed, the significant variations in local rules were done away with, and a teaching and examining College established.
By the 1990s there grew a feeling that the time had come to be one national Association, with State-based Branches co-operating in one framework: this Australian Association was established in 1997, and since then, the V.H.P.B.A. has existed to support the Victoria Branch of Pipe Bands Australia.
Executive Committee:
President: Tim McLeod
Tel.:0438 802 840
Vice-President: Chris Earl
Vice-President: position vacant
Secretary: Tim Calderan
Email:
Assistant Secretary: Helen Dilks
Treasurer: Tim Bodey
The V.H.P.B.A. State Council is made up of the President, Vice-Presidents, Secretary, Assistant Secretary, Treasurer, two representatives for each band, and one for each of the Panels of Piping Judges, Drumming Judges, Dress & Drill Judges and Contest Supervisors.