IN November 1944 the 6th Battalion, The Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) were part of the effort to liberate Walcheren Island and South Beveland from the German invaders. Among them were Lance Corporal Jimmy Muldoon, handler of Rifleman Khan, a German Shepherd that was skilled in finding explosives. As the soldiers’ craft crossed a stretch of water they came under heavy fire. Muldoon’s boat capsized. The dog managed to reach the shore but Muldoon, unable to swim, struggled helplessly. As he was about to disappear from view, Khan plunged into the water and dragged him to safety as shells continued to fall.

Before the war, Khan had belonged to the Railton family in Surrey. Proving to be an excellent pupil at the War Dog Training School, he had been assigned to the 6th Battalion, where he formed a close bond with Muldoon. In March 1945 Khan received the PDSA Dickin Medal for his bravery in rescuing his handler. He was returned to his family, though Muldoon wrote several times without success to the War Office, asking to be allowed to keep him. Then, in July 1947, at Wembley Stadium, Muldoon and Khan were reunited (pictured) at a parade of Dickin medal winners. Their mutual affection was so touching that Mr Harry Railton shook Muldoon’s hand and told him: “The dog is yours.” Thus did Muldoon and Khan spend “their remaining years together in Strathaven, far away from the mud and falling shells of Walcheren,” to quote the Cameronians website.