Kennedy-Shaw was born on 26 October 1901, the son of
Colonel F. S. Kennedy-Shaw, of King's Orchard,
Teffont Magna,
Wiltshire. He received his formal education at
Radley College. During the 1920s and 1930s, Kennedy-Shaw played a key role in exploring the
Western Desert near the southwestern corner of modern
Egypt, drawing on his expertise as a botanist, archaeologist, and navigator. He made four major trips: During the winter of 1927/1928, Kennedy-Shaw and
Douglas Newbold, on leave from the Sudan Government service, travelled the
Arba’in slave road from
Selima and
Bir Natrun, covering 1,000 km by camel. Shaw published observations and photos from the trip in the journal
Sudan Notes and Records. 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. He also travelled with Bagnold in 1932 from
Cairo to
Kharga, to
Uweinat, Sarra,
Tekro,
Uweinat,
El Fasher,
Bir Natrun,
Merga,
Laqia, Selima,
Wadi Halfa,
Dakhla,
Bahariya and back to Cairo, a total distance of 6,000 miles. 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 9 April, 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. ==Second World War==