Description
Russel C Melanson Sr.
Mr. Melanson was born in Mill Village, Nova Scotia, on August 16, 1922. He worked on a farm and in the woods, and completed his education before his first attempt to enlist. He was turned down by the navy as he was underage. Similarly, after joining the West Novies, an artillery regiment, he was discharged for being underage. He was finally accepted into the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion and completed his basic training in Shilo, Manitoba. Once overseas, he was attached to the 3rd Brigade, 6th Airborne Division. Mr. Melanson's first action was at the Battle of the Bulge. His second was the Allied /Russian advance into Germany from the east. After leaving the army, Mr. Melanson became a hydrographer, and retired as the Regional Hydrographer, Bedford Institute of Oceanography.
Transcript
Ran into, as we were going up through, we got into a factory, and a factory where they made these rabbit skin, rabbit skin jackets. So, everybody, practically everyone in the battalion wore a rabbit skin jacket. It was a rabbit skin body and the arms were, were knitted, were knit. Anyway, we, we eventually reached Wismar, which is just on the coast of the Baltic. And we reached there, I guess, just about two hours before the Russians would've, would've reached there. And they came down through, and they, they came down through another city. I forget the, forget the name of it now, another town, but . . . Rostock. And, so, they came down and joined us. And the Germans were coming through, the Germans were coming through in, in droves. They wanted to give up, give up, you know, surrender to us. And we had, between us and the Baltic, there was an airfield, and we set up a very large concentration camp there, and the, the German troops who gave up, we marched them down there, and they went into the concentration camp, and so on. So, we, we stayed there for about, I guess, maybe a week, week and a half, or something like that. And then we returned to England, and shortly after that, the battalion came back to Canada.