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There are numerous Sheldons
that could lay a claim to fame, below are links to websites
Andy Sheldon SKY TV
Sidney Sheldon Author
Lord
Robert Sheldon
Harry Sheldon
A little bit of Scottish military history died recently
with the passing of Harry Sheldon at the age of 84 in
Hemel Hempstead.
Sheldon was the official Indian Army war artist whom
the legendary Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck "discovered"
waiting to be invalided from a Karachi hospital back
to Britain in 1943. Auchinleck, whose distinguished
family had played a leading role in Scottish history
for more than 200 years, had the rank of General at
the time and C-in-C India.
He was impressed by an unofficial exhibition of war
art that Lt Harry Sheldon, 8th Gurkha Rifles, Indian
Army, had mounted there and persuaded him to remain
behind and become his official war artist.
Sheldon, however, had another claim to fame: Lord Louis
Mountbatten, Supremo, South-East Asia Command, had also
been highly impressed with his work and had pleaded
with "The Auk" for his services. This request was swiftly
thwarted by Auchinleck, who saw it as a dangerous move
by the Supremo to project further his charismatic frontline
image. Many of the other generals in the theatre of
war shared the same, jealous view.
More than half a century after the event, Sheldon,
who left the services as a captain and was elected FRSA
in 1953, still treasured the original letter from Mountbatten
pleading for his services for his own command. It all
began when Auchinleck presented Lord Louis with a Sheldon
work which he had particularly admired: a portrait of
a turbaned, bearded Sikh in the Viceroy’s Bodyguard.
The letter read: "It really is a magnificent picture."
He added that he was taking it to hang in Government
House in Singapore "to remind distinguished visitors
of what we owe to the Indian Army." Mountbatten revealed
that he had asked Auchinleck for his services. But Auchinleck
didn’t want to lose his "art discovery" - to Mountbatten.
"You don’t want to join him," Auchinleck moaned to Sheldon
Born in Marple, Cheshire, in 1917, he studied under
LS Lowry, no less, at Salford Technical School, Lancashire.
There are four generations of artists - stained glass
window-designers and draughtsmen - in his family background.
"Harry's son, Paul, is probably the finest scraperboard
artist in Europe,"
By the end of the war, Sheldon, then only 28, had left
behind a formidable artistic legacy in the fading light
of the British Raj. He had painted most of the famous
Indian Army commanders: the future Admiral of the Fleet,
Earl Mountbatten of Burma himself; Field-Marshall Lord
Wavell, Viceroy of India; Auchinleck; Lt-Gen Sir Frederick
"Boy" Browning; Field Marshal Viscount Slim - and all
the Indian Army VCs. Today, Sheldon’s works are scattered
throughout the sub-continent in museums.
In peacetime, he exhibited frequently at the Royal
Society of Painters in Watercolours and Royal Society
of Portrait Painters. His one-man shows ranged from
Delhi to Cairo to London. His work has been preserved
for War Office records and other examples are in most
British military museums. The Sheldon war-art legacy
is assured for the nation. Mountbatten of Burma would
have been pleased. But Sir Claude Auchinleck who takes
the greatest pride in having discovered him in the heat
of battle.
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