George Duncan was born on 8 March 1884, the son of Alexander Duncan, a tailor's cutter, in Forfar in Angus, Scotland. He was educated at Forfar Academy.[1]
His two parents and his elder brother died of disease as he was still a young man. As an orphan, this promising student received financial help from a scottish wealthy family.
In the late 1950s he worked as a translator of the New Testament text for the New English Bible.[2]
In the mid-1960s he wrote an account of his war experiences in World War 1, as a part of a wider apologia for Douglas Haig that comprises its text, whose historical reputation had suffered for his conduct of military operations in the conflict. The account was published posthumously entitled: Douglas Haig As I Knew Him (1966).[2]
Death
Duncan died in April 1965 in his 82nd year.
Family
In July 1923 he married Amy Hay Thomson, daughter of Rev James Thomson of Gartly and widow of J. H. Norden, but the marriage was short-lived, ending with her death in February 1924, less than a year later.[1]
Cameron, Nigel M de S (1993). Dictionary of Scottish Church History & Theology. Edinburgh: T & T Clark Ltd. ISBN0567096505. Article Duncan, George Simpson by F F Bruce