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Value of Merchant Navy

Heroes Remember

Value of Merchant Navy

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Interviewer: As a Veteran of the Merchant Marine, how, what are your feelings about the Merchant Marine? Well I was a little sad that the government of Canada didn't really recognize the Merchan tMarine and what they accomplished for so many years. But uh really we didn'tgo out to get recognized or anything we just thought that was part of what was needed to be done and uh, and we went out. I would have liked to have been a fighter pilot I think. Shovelling coal wasn't very exciting if you want. But if you didn't shovel coal the ship didn't move and therefore the pilots wouldn't have got any fuel to fly the air plane. After thewar or so after a few years after the war I joined the Air Force. I spent twenty eight years in the Air Force. Enjoyed it too. But uh, staring over again if I was to go to be able to go right back and have a choice I'd probably go back to the Merchant Navy. It gave you a real sense of accomplishment When you, you, when you think back and when you, when you finished know that all the blisters you had on your hand were, were earned and earned for af or a pretty good reason.
Description

Mr. Downing was asked for his thoughts on the value of the contribution of the Merchant Marine during the Second World War.

Robert Downing

Mr. Downing was born in Leamington, Ontario on August 24, 1927. He did all his schooling there. His father, a Veteran of the First World War, owned and operated a factory in Leamington that manufactured crates and baskets for farmers. As a teenager, Robert Downing spent a lot of time working for his father in that factory. Mr. Downing had a younger brother and an older sister. Mr. Downing remembered learning about the war in Europe from the newsreels he would see when he went to the movies.

In 1944, just before he turned 17, he enlisted in the Merchant Marine. He was anxious to join the war effort, but was too young to sign up with the regular forces. He began his training in Prescott, Ontario where he learned to be a ship's engineer. A few weeks after that training, he was sent to Montreal to work aboard his first ship.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
01:43
Person Interviewed:
Robert Downing
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Branch:
Merchant Navy

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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