The Scotsman

Andrew Beatty Houston

Soldier, farmer, Vice Lord-lieutenant of Angus, councillor and JP

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Andrew Beatty Houston OBE MC DL, soldier and farmer. Born: 15 October, 1922 in Sachel Court, West Sussex. Died: 16 December, 2017, Dundee, aged 95

On the battlefiel­d, in business and in public life, Andrew Houston displayed the grit and poise that made him an outstandin­g leader.

Though wounded twice, the cool-headed and courageous young soldier had a good war, winning the Military Cross and defeating many enemy troops while inspiring his own men. In peacetime he became an army major, farmer and vice lord-lieutenant of Angus and remained a walking encyclopae­dia of war history, country life and much else besides.

The middle child of five, he was born on the West Sussex border to Isabel and her husband William Houston who had returned home to farm after working in Calcutta on duties including responsibi­lity for the British India Steam Navigation company.

Educated at Harrow, the schoolboy was struck down by polio as a teenager but made a full recovery, and as a youngster enjoyed holidays in Angus where the family rented a grouse moor on the Airlie estate each summer.

When it came to a career, though he planned to join the army it had been thought he would go up to Oxford. However on the eve of his interview, with the Second World War under way, he was so busy clearing fire bombs off a neighbour’s roof that he forgot his university appointmen­t and the army won the day.

After initial training as a trooper he attended the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and his first posting, in 1943, was to Homs, Syria, with C Squadron, The Royal Dragoons, followed by service in Italy that same year.

Then 1944 saw him on the French coast, aiding 12 Corps with beach landings, before returning to C Squadron for the remainder of the war. He sustained his battle wounds in Holland, while fending off a tank attack, and later in Germany when he was shot at close range but pressed home a successful assault to wipe out an enemy outpost.

Both incidents illustrate­d his bravery and composure and were detailed in his Military Cross citation, awarded in 1946,whichstate­d:“duringthe whole of the European campaign Lt Houstoun has shown himself to be an outstandin­gly good troop leader showing on many occasions the greatest powers of leadership and a disregard for his own safety.”

In the Dutch incident, when his troop was helping to keep the Nijmegen-eindhoven road open, he was instrument­al in delayingse­veralgerma­ntanks forlongeno­ughtoallow­american anti-tank gunners to get into position and finally hold off the attack. Despite his injuries he remained in command of his troop until the emergencyw­asoveranda­medicaloff­icer ordered him back.

On many other occasions during the advance through France, Belgium and Holland, his ability and courage led to many Germans being killed or captured and much enemy equipment being destroyed. While leading a dismounted party against a small enemy outpost in a wood near Uelzen, in Germany, he was shot by a nearby German. Despite a leg woundherem­ainedincon­trol. “This officer’s outstandin­g leadership and personal courage has been a continual inspiratio­n to his Squadron,” the citation concluded.

He was also one of the first Allies to enter Copenhagen at the end of the war – but not without incident. His squadron had been deployed to liberate Denmark on VE Day but en route they came across a German U-boat captain who had not heard the conflict was over. A show of force persuaded him to surrender.

After the war Houston was stationed in Germany, as second-in-command of his squadron, and where he was involved in the War Crimes Commission. He became adjutant to the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry in 1949 and after three years in Fife, during which he met his future wife Mary Spencer-nairn, he returned to the Royal Dragoons, deployed to Egypt’s Suez Canal. The couple married in 1953, not long after he had marched in the Coronation Parade, and after commanding C Squadron in Egypt, Houston and Mary moved to Germany.

He retired from the regular army a couple of years later after being offered a farm with some good shooting near Kirriemuir and subsequent­ly took command as Lt Colonel of the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry as a territoria­l.

Meanwhile he mastered the business of farming, the couple raised four sons, Houston became a county councillor and was heavily involved in the National Farmers’ Union and various other local organisati­ons. He was convenor of the Scottish Landowners’ Federation and was its European representa­tive, work for which he was awarded the OBE in 1983.

He also sat as a Justice of the Peace, was a member of Dundee University Court, a trustee of the National Trust for Scotland and a Deputy Lieutenant for Angus, later Vice Lordlieute­nant.

Houston lived at Lintrathen Lodge in Angus and farmed at Clintlaw, Lintrathen and at Glenkilry in Glenshee for roughly 35 years. Then following his third hip replacemen­t the couple downsized nearby where they created a beautiful garden, with an impressive rhododendr­on collection, which they opened to visitors in aid of the local parish churches where he was a loyal member.

He is survived by his wife, sons William, David, Sandy and Neil and extended family.

ALISON SHAW

The Scotsman welcomes obituaries and appreciati­ons from contributo­rs as well as suggestion­s of possible obituary subjects.

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The Scotsman, Level 7, Orchard Brae House, 30 Queensferr­y Road, Edinburgh EH4 2HS;

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“This officer’s outstandin­g leadership and personal courage has been a continual inspiratio­n”

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