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Off Duty Activities

Heroes Remember

Transcript
Well you know, we were never allowed to dance in the war. Not once did we dance. That was a long time. And people here, you know nurses or anybody, they can't understand why we couldn't have dances. But they said they thought it was something to do with the Crimean War. We never did really hear why, why not. But they had been dancing when they should have been looking after the enemy. But I don't know that but that's what they said. But we used to have a little tea party if we were off duty on Sunday and the Colonel would be asked to send down maybe, oh depends how many of us were off, say it might be half a dozen, maybe more or less. He would send these fellows down and we had games. Musical chairs or turn the trencher and a few things like that. And I think there was a piano there, somewhere in the hall wherever we had the, the tea party. Obviously I can't remember what we had to eat but I'm sure we had tea to drink, that's all I can remember. Interviewer: So that's where you met your husband? Yes, and I, I never really took much notice of him. Until I heard somebody, another person say "Who does so and so always come down to see?" That was my Hugh you see. "Who does he go down to see?" Well, I didn't know he wanted to see me specially or anything. Well anyway, that went on, we just were getting pretty well worn out but I think sometimes they had a weekend and even got to Paris, but I was never lucky enough in that way, but um. And then we sometimes could take a walk to the beach, but we never went in the water as far as I remember. Never allowed in the water. Interviewer: Was your husband the first Canadian that you'd ever met? I suppose he was really, I never thought of that, I suppose he was. Interviewer: So obviously you were favourably impressed by Canadians. Yes, I didn't mind him, I wasn't particularly keen on him, but I, I liked him pretty well. And then it came that he, he had to go somewhere else. And I know I went to the station to see some of them off and he was to go with that lot. And I, I said good-bye and another nurse said to me "Do you think you'll ever see him again?" and I said, "Oh, maybe I don't know, perhaps I will." And I did because after I left France we all had to go into a hospital in England and be checked up you see. And I had, by that time I had a bad heart, you know with doing too much and too long hours and one thing or another. Because when we went out at night you see, we had to go out when the moon was shining, we had to go out, if we were off duty, but as I said if you were on you just kept walking up and down, up and down, up and down, all night long. But if you were off you took your blanket and you went up, there was a little hill with trees and some extension of other things there. And we'd go and hide under the trees and then one night, it was a terrible night, a terrible night. And we had Chinese near us, now we never knew that. I never knew we had Chinese near us. I knew we had Chinese if we went out on the road or anything past our camp because they would be digging the trenches for us around the hospital. They dug trenches for us to go in if it got too bad at night. And we were told if they came along marching all together, not to look at them and never to say a word. And as they went by it was just like a roll of thunder. They were all talking at once, and making so much noise. And then it got so we knew there were Chinese in the distance but we never knew they were just past that hill. Well, they were in high wire fences, high wire fences with all barbed wire on the top so they couldn't get out. Well that night was so bad they couldn't stand it I guess and they climbed those fences and got over the top and of course rushed through the woods right over us and we each had our own blanket to us. And they grabbed our blankets like this and oh, I was hanging on to mine like death. It was, blanket, you wouldn't get another blanket anywhere. And then they, they went on I guess and we. And the bombing stopped and we had rescued our blankets from the cheeky beggars, we said. The 'cheeky beggars' we said. Interviewer: So on nights where there was full moon you had to be concerned about bombing attacks? Yeah. Interviewer: How far back from the front would you have been? Oh we could hear the guns but it was in the distance of course, in the distance. Interviewer: How many times was your hospital attacked by bombers? Do you remember? No, I can't remember. I know, I know we always had to dash, dash out you know, up into the trees. That's if we were off duty, but if you were on duty you stayed all the time. I had one, one doctor came in oh and he tried to get under one of the cots you know. And he cut his knee so badly, there wasn't room, he thought it would be safe, safer under there but it wasn't. Then of course, when we landed in hospital in London they said I had a V.D.H. very dicky heart. Well, I think anybody would. Interviewer: How long were you in the hospital? How long? Interviewer: Yes Yes? Oh, not very long. My, my future husband found me. I don't know how he found me. But he heard which hospital the nurses were in and he came with a big bunch of roses, which I was very pleased with.
Description

Ms. MacKinnon remembers the details of meeting the Canadian Army officer who would later become her husband.

Alice MacKinnon

Alice MacKinnon was born in England on June 23, 1894. She received her nursing training at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London and then volunteered for service as a Nursing Sister in the British Army during the First World War. While serving, she met and later married a Canadian Army officer and returned to Canada with him following the war. At the time of this interview, Mrs. MacKinnon was 102 years old and resided at the Veterans’ Wing of the Queen Elizabeth Health Sciences Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
09:21
Person Interviewed:
Alice MacKinnon
War, Conflict or Mission:
First World War
Branch:
Army
Occupation:
Nursing Sister

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