An unlikely war hero who volunteered to serve miles behind enemy lines alongside one of the most ferocious fighting units of the British Army
In 1944 some members of the SAS regiment based at Darvel, Ayrshire, were having a wild all-night drinking session. the regiment was led by lt-col blair ‘paddy’ mayne, a fearsome warrior whose taste for violence both on and off the battlefield was legendary. Mayne was a hard-living, harder-drinking Irishman who can justly be called one of the greatest soldiers of World War II. His leadership of the fledgling SAS, after the capture of their founder, Col David stirling, took the regiment to new heights of ferocity and daring. mayne was proud of his force of rogue warriors and their reputation as fierce fighters and reprobates, but he was about to enrol a man with a very different outlook on life.
Mayne would first meet his new recruit after the above-mentioned all-night drinking session with fellow SAS veteran Johnny cooper. cooper recalled years later in an interview: “At that stage I was struggling to get the blackouts down and there came this knock on the front door. I opened the door and there stood this padre, who said, ‘captain McCluskey reporting for duty.’”
the Reverend James Fraser McCluskey was a gentle, devout man of God who few would have picked out as a potential war hero. Nevertheless he firmly believed that his calling was to help the British war effort. An ordained minister of the Scottish Kirk, he had volunteered to serve as a padre and had been training for months, even learning how to parachute.
McLuskey recounted that first meeting with his SAS comrades later in life: “My first impressions of things were somewhat chaotic,” he said. “The commanding officer and some of his best friends had been, shall we say, ‘celebrating’ the night before and indeed into the morning! so the appearance of the mess was pleasantly confused.”
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