1st. Lt. George Lynn, Jr. and his dog, Laddie. early in 1944. Laddie was nine months old in the photos. 1st. Lt. Lynn, Jr. was stationed in Chicago at the University of Chicago, training medical students to become medics. Laddie was his personal compaion. Laddie was trained by Lt. Lynn, Jr. to do a building searches, and he used Laddie for that purpose when he had to do the rounds at night. During the time he was stationed in Chicago, Lt. Lynn, Jr. became friends with an Army "canine recruiter" for "Dogs for Defense". After much soul searching, Laddie was loaned to "Dogs for Defense" and went to the Remount Station in Front Royal, Virginia as a possible war dog.
Just before Lt. Lynn, Jr. shipped out to the Pacific, he went to Front Royal to see Laddie who was just finishing his training. He was told when he got there that he couldn't see the dog, but Lt. Lynn, Jr. had a very forceful personality and in the end they let him visit with his dog. Lt. Lynn, Jr. spent the rest of the war with the 1113 Engineer Construction Group in New Guinea, the Philippines and Okinawa and returned home with a purple heart.
After the war, Lt. Lynn, Jr. continued his interest in German Shepherds and in fact bred and showed them. Soon after the war while visiting a local German Shepherd Kennel, he ran into his friend from Chicago - the Dogs for Defense guy. He was still looking for dogs to be loaned to the military. He remembered Laddie and said that he had distinguished himself very well during the war. Laddie also was shipped to the Pacific theater and used to lay wire. He survived the war and was used afterwards to guard the quarters of the commanding officer of a base in the Pacific - the black and cream shepherd named Laddie who had a kink in his tail. Lt. Lynn, Jr. never was able to learn of Laddie’s fate after that. Good boy, Laddie.
Sharon Lynn
Daughter of Lt. Lynn, Jr.


