Dedicated to the memory of:

Private

Stewart Ian Laing

3rd Battalion The Parachute Regiment

Garden of Remembrance Stewart Ian Laing 3rd Battalion The Parachute Regiment

Private Stewart Ian Laing, was born on the 24th April 1962 in Gateshead.

He served with the 3rd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment (3 PARA).

Private Laing died during the Battle for Mount Longdon on 12 June 1982, aged 20 years old.

He rests at Lanchester Cemetery, Durham.

Jimmy O’Connell (author of the book “Three Days In June”) recalls this about Stewart:

“I first met Stewart AKA ‘Geordie’ Laing in June 1979, we met in The Parachute Regiment Depot, we both joined 459 Platoon, and I must say I was not keen on him at first, as he was a very loud and boisterous, but as I gradually got to know him, I found a good friend who would do anything for you, he’d give you the shirt off his back if he had to. He fitted in well and made many friends. Unfortunately during P Company he sustained an injury and sadly had to leave our platoon while his injury healed. 

When I passed out of Para Depot I was sent to 3 Para, who were based in Germany at the time.

However, such was Stewart’s strength of character, that as soon as he was well enough, he re-joined another platoon and completed P Company and proudly passed out of Depot.

In 1980, approximately April / May, the 3rd battalion was now back in the UK and based in Tidworth Wiltshire, I was in B Company when Stewart arrived in the battalion, he was posted to A Company 3 Para, and once again Stewart was a very popular character, but not long after he arrived, the battalion was sent to Northern Ireland on a six month posting over 1980/1981, he was based in Armagh, I was in Aughnacloy, shortly after the battalion returned from Northern Ireland he and I both applied to do an anti-tank cadre, and shortly after we joined Support Company, Anti Tank Platoon, here Geordie made lots of friends like Pat Harley, Kev Connery, Johno, Mushrooms, Terry Martin, Charlie Hardwick, and many more, in fact too many to mention, We went to Canada and had a ball! Life in the battalion was great, I can honestly say those years were some of the happiest times of my life, great times with great friends.

Then came April 1982, off we sailed on the SS Canberra, and as a platoon, we drank our fill and would often sit in deck chairs at the back of the boat and put the world to right over a few beers. When we landed, Support Company was divided between the various rifle companies’. Stewart was attached to B Company and on the night of the attack on Mount Longdon he was attached to 6 Platoon, he was killed trying desperately to save a friend who’d been wounded and was pinned down by the enemy fire, this was a typical act from Stewart, never thinking of himself always thinking of others, sadly Stewart like many others received no official recognition for his bravery, but we know what he did, and how brave he was.
He will always be remembered by those of us who knew him, not a day goes by that we don’t think of him or the other members of the anti tanks who died that night and the rest of the battalion, Whenever I think of him its always with a big smile on his face, he was and still is a great loss.
 

Good night and God bless Stewart
 

From your mucker, Jimmy O`Connell

 Image (above right) & information courtesy of www.paradata.org.uk

Image (above right) kindly provided to Paradata by Jimmy O’Connell 

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Family and friends are encouraged to contribute.

We will add information to this memorial as we receive it.

If you have a photo, an anecdote, or simply to say you remember him, we will be very pleased to hear from you, so please contact the SAMA82 office at [email protected]

In 2022, as part of the 40th Anniversary commemorations, geographical features were identified and named after the fallen of 1982.  LAING POINT is the northernmost tip of Sea Lion Easterly Island, in the Sea Lion Islands group, East Falkland.

It is in position
52° 26′ 19.95″ S, 058° 53′ 33.39″ W