Description
Mr. Cromwell speaks about reuniting with his family and spending their first Christmas together in six years.
Everett Sylvester Cromwell
Everett Cromwell was born on December 12, 1921 in Weymouth Falls, Digby Co., Nova Scotia. He was the fifth of ten children. At age twelve, he left school to work in the woods because his father, also a forestry worker, had fallen ill. Both of his parents were soon deceased, and the ten children stayed in the family home supporting one another. Mr.Cromwell supported the family by working for a local farmer and then in the local lumberyard. He enlisted in June, 1941 in the Royal Canadian Army Service Corps. After basic training in Halifax, Sherbrooke, and Camp Borden, he sailed aboard the Louis Pasteur to England, arriving on December 23, 1941. Two weeks after the D-day raid, Mr. Cromwell arrived in France with the 2nd Division, Motor Transport. For the duration of the war, his unit was responsible for transporting fuel, food and ammunition to the Front in support of the Allied advance on Germany. After being discharged from the army and returning home, Mr. Cromwell, recently married, reenlisted because it was ‘steady work’. He and his family were to experience institutionalized racism in Halifax, being denied accommodations because of their black heritage. This in contrast to the fact that he felt equal in all respects as a member of the Army. Mr. Cromwell and his wife, Elizabeth, currently reside in Shelburne, Nova Scotia.
Transcript
Interviewer: When you finally got home to your brothers and sisters, do you remember the homecoming? Yeah, well let’s see, I left home and I got back again it was five years and one month. Our little girl, my youngest sister was only eight years old and when I got back home she was getting on thirteen, fourteen. She was tall. It was a funny feeling. And I was the last one to come home from the family. See now, our family now, 1946, that was the first Christmas we spent together since 1940. And that Christmas the whole ten of us was home.