Skip to main content
George Shepherd Registered Chemist and Druggist by Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain
George Shepherd
George Shepherd Registered Chemist and Druggist by Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain
George Shepherd Registered Chemist and Druggist by Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain

George Shepherd

Aberdeen, Scotland, 1913 - 1985
About MeWhen George Shepherd was called-up for World War II, he was summoned to the Music Hall to join the Gordon Highlanders. For a time he was stationed in Orkney, based at Tormiston Mill on the Orkney Mainland. Because of his qualification and experience as a Pharmacist, he was given compulsory transfer to the RAMC (Royal Army Medical Corps) and then finally to Intelligence.

He was promoted, but chose to revert to the ranks three times at his own request, although finally he did accept promotion, becoming Sergeant-Major (Warrant Officer 1).

WAR IN THE FAR EAST

George Shepherd was sent to the Far East with the IVth Army in the troopship Orion, firstly to India where his training in Quetta included a crash-course in Hindustani, a language in which he became fluent.

Much of his war service was spent in Burma, mostly with the Ghurkhas whom he admired greatly. For one year he was the only white man in his unit of "the Forgotten Army" in the Arakan Box. They received supplies by air-drop, and dyed pannier-donkeys green as camouflage for crossing ridges in the dense jungle.

His small collection of war photographs (although not all taken by himself) include the Japanese surrender in Malaya in 1945.

When he was repatriated to Britain in 1946 he was not allowed home to Scotland, but sent to Portsmouth to work as Acting Doctor in a hospital. He finally returned home in 1946 and resumed his career as a pharmacist with Davidson & Kay Ltd.

After the war George Shepherd never wore his medals or ribbons, even on Remembrance Sunday or at formal events which stated that "Decorations may be worn".

See ABDMS079213.
Forres, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, 1905 - 1944
Raban Plaque St Nicholas Kirk
Worcestershire, England, 1579 - 1658
Thomas Edward Lawrence
Tremadog, Wales, 1888 - 1935
Brigadier Frost Pasha
Aberdeen, Scotland, 1838 - 1902
Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn
Buckingham Palace, London, England, 1850 - 1942
Aerial View Of Dyce Airport
Scotland, 1894 - 1987
Eric Gill
Brighton, England, 1882 - 1940
'Shooting Star' Brooch by Georg Jensen
Copenhagen, Denmark, 1918 - 1981
World War 1 Memorial Plaque for David Stephen
Montrose, Scotland, 1864 - 1918
Eric Newton
Marple Bridge, Manchester, England, 1893 - 1965
Valentines
Dundee, Scotland, founded 1851
Sunshine On The Riviera by Henri Joseph Harpignies
Valenciennes, France, 1819 - 1916
King Faisal I of Iraq
Mecca, Saudi Arabia, 1885 - 1933
Prisoner of War Kit Bag
Germany
Gwynneth Holt
Wednesbury, England, 1909 - 1995
Craigie, Perth and Kinross, Scotland, 1880 - 1959
Sir John Lavery
Belfast, Northern Ireland, 1856 - 1941
Frederick Soddy
Eastbourne, England, 1877 - 1956
Jimmy Allan
Morayshire, Scotland, 1912 - 1971
Sandy Dunbar
London, England, 1929 - 2012
Marion Patterson
Aberdeen, Scotland, 1911 - 1993