Awards & Winners

Stewart McPherson

Date of Birth 1822
Place of Birth Culross
(United Kingdom, Fife)
Nationality United Kingdom
Profession Soldier
Stewart McPherson VC was a Scottish soldier in India and a recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth military forces. Stewart McPherson was born in Culross in 1819, the only son of Mungo and Mary. He left Geddes Public School at 15 to become an apprentice weaver in Dunfermline, but he was soon lured by adventure and foreign travel. In December 1839 he walked to Stirling to join the British Army's 78th Highlanders, which were later to become the Seaforth Highlanders Ross-shire Buffs, Duke of Albany's. He married a Culross girl, Elizabeth Haig, in 1848 and the couple went on to have six children - Stewart Sarah, Eliza, Robina, Ferguson and McGregor. McPherson saw action in Persia, India and Ireland before arriving in Bengal, India. He was approximately 38 years old, and now a colour-sergeant. During his time here, his actions during the Siege of Lucknow in the Indian Mutiny earned him the Victoria Cross. His citation reads: For daring gallantry in the Lucknow Residency on the 26th September, 1857, in having rescued, at great personal risk, a wounded

Awards by Stewart McPherson

Check all the awards nominated and won by Stewart McPherson.

1857


Victoria Cross
(For daring gallantry in the Lucknow Residency on the 26th September, 1857, in having rescued, at great personal risk, a wounded Private of his Company, who was lying in a most exposed situation, under a very heavy fire. Colour-Serjeant McPherson of Unit 78th Highlanders, was also distinguished on many occasions by his coolness and gallantry in action.)