John Norman Stuart Buchan, 2nd Baron TweedsmuirCBE, CD, FRSE, FRSA, commonly called Johnnie Buchan, was a Scottish peer and the son of the novelist John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir. He was a colonial administrator and naturalist, but also a true-life adventurer. He has been described as a "brilliant fisherman and naturalist, a gallant soldier and fine writer of English, an explorer, colonial administrator and man of business."
After a period in the Colonial Administrative Service in Uganda he contracted dysentery and was forced to leave Africa on health grounds. He went to join his parents in Canada in 1936. Here he joined the Hudson's Bay Company. He drove a dog-sled 3000 miles and spent the winter of 1938/9 at the remote Cape Dorset in Baffinland. In September 1939 at the onset of war, he joined the Governor General's Foot Guards in Canada, and was with the first Canadian troopship to reach England in December 1939. In February 1940 his father died and he became Baron Tweedsmuir. In 1941 he saw active service with the Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment, ultimately in Sicily for which he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 1946 New Year Honours. Farley Mowat, who served as an infantryman in the HPE Regiment, described Tweedsmuir as a soldier, newly in command. Mowat's account is in his war memoir, "And No Birds Sang". The task was to take Assoro, an ancient, and well-fortified, promontory blocking the regiment's advance. "Barely thirty years of age, soft-spoken, kindly, with a slight tendency to stutter, he was a tall fair-haired English romantic out of another age... his famous father's perhaps. 'Tweedie,' as we called him behind his back, had as a youth sought high adventure . But until this hour real adventure in the grand tradition had eluded him. Going forward on his own reconnaissance that afternoon in company with the new second-in-command, Major 'Ack Ack' Kennedy, Tweedsmuir looked up at the towering colossus of Assoro with the visionary eye of a Lawrence of Arabia, and saw that the only way to accomplish the impossible was to attempt the impossible. He thereupon decided that the battalion would make a right flank march by night across the intervening trackless gullies to the foot of the great cliff, scale that precipitous wall and, just at dawn, take the summit by surprise." The operation succeeded. Tweedsmuir was later wounded in Sicily. He was twice Mentioned in Dispatches.
In later life he lived in Kingston House at Kingston Bagpuize in rural Oxfordshire. He returned to Scotland for the final two months of his life and died in a small cottage in North Berwick. He had no male heir, so upon his death the barony passed to his younger brother.