George A Moodie.
George joined the Royal Scots in
1943 while living in his home town of Edinburgh. He
volunteered for the airborne soon after and upon completion
of training was posted to the 9th parachute battalion of the
6th airborne division. He was one of the few who actually
took part in the attack on the Merville Battery on D-day as
part of Lt Alan (twinkle toes) Jeffersons assault group.
He stayed with the battalion until
1948, taking part in The battle of the Bulge and The Rhine
crossing and operations in Palestine. On returning to the UK
he was posted to the P.C.A.U at Upper Heyford where he met a
young parachute packer, Hilary Sloane. They married on Xmas
eve 1949.
In Feb 1950 he left the army and
tried civvy life but re-enlisted in 1951. The recruiter
thought he was a new recruit so he was given a new army
number by mistake. Once more he joined the Royal Scots for
six weeks, insisting on going back to the Para's he was sent
back to depot, doing the entire P course again with other
returning veterans. He was once more posted to P.C.A.U at
Abingdon.
It was here in 1953 he took part in
the filming of The Red Beret completing the jump scenes
from the balloon and aircraft. After another stint at depot
he was posted to 3 Para, serving in the middle east in
Jordan, Egypt and Cyprus. He missed the last combat drop
during the Suez crisis due to the birth of a new son. He
stayed with 3 Para and HQ until 1966. He then served as an
M.O.D police Sergeant until retirement in 1985.
He now lives back in his native
Scotland with Hilary and is a member of Fife branch P.R.A.
George and Hilary had 8 children, 5 boys and 3 girls, sadly
one girl died in infancy. All five sons joined the army, the
eldest with The Duke of Wellingtons Regiment and the others
all joining The Parachute Regiment. The two girls followed
mum into the R.A.F.