Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Dunkirk veteran was oldest survivor

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MAJOR John Errington was the oldest veteran of the Royal Scots regiment and fought in rearguard defence during the Dunkirk evacuation­s, evaded a German massacre in 1940 and survived five years as a prisoner of war.

Major Errington, born on August 12, 1918 at his family home in Beeslack, east of Penicuik, fought at the battle of Le Paradis in north-east France in May 1940.

The 1st Battalion The Royal Scots, reduced in strength to 400 men by over two weeks in action, prepared for their last stand at Le Paradis, 30 miles from Dunkirk, on May 25 that year.

Their defence action is said to have helped delay the German advance, allowing thousands of British troops to reach the beaches of Dunkirk.

More than 100 battle survivors, including many wounded, were later massacred by troops of the German SS Division Totenkop, regimental historians claim, a fate Major Errington avoided.

However, he was eventually captured and spent five years as a prisoner of war.

During his time as prisoner, his sister, who lived on Mull, arranged for food parcels to be sent to him from Edinburgh’s best shops, including cigars which he used as currency, his loved ones said.

They said he was respected by his German guards because he was able to turn his hand to many practical repairs in the camp.

At one point, they claim he was in Oflag V11-C with officers of the 51st Highland Division and practising the newly invented Reel of the 51st Highland Division.

After surviving the war, the veteran, who was educated at Wellington College, narrowly avoided the bombing of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem in 1946.

That happened after he rejoined the regiment before being posted to the Middle East Centre for Arab Studies (MECAS) in Jerusalem to improve the Arabic he learnt in the prisoner of war camp from a Palestinia­n civilian member of the Pioneer Corps.

On July 22, 1946, the regiment’s Arabic tutor kept troops into their lunch hour, which they would have normally spent at the King David Hotel.

At 12.26pm, the hotel was virtually destroyed by a bomb planted by Zionist insurgent group, the Irgun, killing 91 and wounding many more, historians said.

Major Errington always believed that their tutor knew what was about to happen and deliberate­ly held them back that day, it is understood.

After the war, Major Errington was posted to the Combined Intelligen­ce Centre at RAF Habbaniya in what was then Iraq, where he met Brenda Reeves, whom he married in

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