Shuffrey entered the Colonial Service in 1912. The following year he became Political Officer for Imperri District,
Sierra Leone, following rebellion in the region. He later became Private Secretary to Sir
Edward Merewether, Governor and Commander in Chief, and later to Merewether's successor,
Richard James Wilkinson. Shuffrey served many years in provincial administration as District Commissioner and acting Provincial Commissioner. He received the thanks of the Government for his measures taken during the rebellion of 1919. Shuffrey resigned in 1924, and returned to England to assist his father with his business of Shuffrey & Co. He was not a trained architect, and following his father's death two years later, the business was closed. He continued to live in a flat at the premises on New Cavendish Street, London, for the rest of his life. Shuffrey edited the Social Service Review, and between 1939 and 1951, and the Church Guardian. In 1952 he became Proprietor and Editor of the
Church Quarterly Review. The 1955 edition went to print soon after Shuffrey's death, and was dedicated to its late editor. On his death Shuffrey made a gift to his college,
Lincoln College, Oxford, in memory of his father, to endow a fellowship in the field of architecture, classics and art history. == Family ==