Description
Tom Gilday
In Ottawa he ended up volunteering for parachuting and hazardous duties. He then was part of a group that became the first Special Force; half Canadian and half American. He was then appointed as Battalion Commander. His crew fought and took over many mountain ranges that the Germans were protecting. They attacked at night and painted their faces black, they were known to the Germans as the ‘Devil's Brigade'. After being on the line for eight months during the Italian Campaign it was decided he would run a Recruit Training School. He then opened and ran the first Canadian Army Leave Transit Camp in Oyster Work. The camp was later moved to a larger camp in Nijmegen. In 1945 Mr Gilday was appointed General Staff Officer and placed in charge of the city of Amsterdam. He stayed there for six months and then returned home.
Transcript
All the training in the world doesn't prepare you for the real thing, it doesn't prepare you for the real thing, it really doesn't. A mind is a funny thing, a mind is a very funny thing. It has a way of forgetting, it has a way of tucking things away. There is someplace back in there where things are tucked away and they can stay tucked away for days and weeks and months and then just by bringing it up here, with you, means that when I go to bed tonight one of those little things that are tucked away might come up, come around and I'll start fighting, then you start fighting something all over again, fighting something all over again. But that's the way the mind works and I'll probably never forget until you, until somebody else reminds you of something you always remember the good times and so I think you concentrate on the good times. And there are lots of good times, really good times, on leave and good companions and good fellowship and all that sort of business. Then you have your five or six days here and your five or six days there that are the tough times.