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There Was No Naval Opposition To Us.

Heroes Remember

There Was No Naval Opposition To Us.

Transcript
Then the Korean War started and I was made the captain of the Athabascan, which is another, a new destroyer. The Korean War was very dangerous if you happened to be a soldier, because all the fighting took place ashore. And the role of the navy there was to stop the North Koreans using the sea to supply themselves, because they started the war by capturing all of South Korea. Our job was to drive them back but the navy could really do nothing about it and it was really a soldier’s war and we were never in any... it was quite different. I mean, A - the weather was perfect, the wind didn’t blow and the sea didn’t freeze and so on. And there was no Korean, no naval opposition to us. It was possible but it never happened. And the same with the air force. The air force’s role in Korea was minimal. They flew a lot of planes but there was no opposition to them. We used to bombard the shore in Korea but nobody ever fired back at us or rarely. So it was... we were ‘do-gooders.’ We rescued people and we picked up derelict boats at sea, full of survivors who were trying to escape their captors. There was not much danger of being killed. We did one operation which got ourselves into the newspapers. This was when the North Koreans drove our forces - the Canadians were there too, but mainly Americans - south and 25,000 US soldiers were killed. So this was a major operation, but it was entirely the army that did the losses. Well, we... there were six destroyers went up a river in North Korea and we crept up this river in the dark. And we shelled the Chinese army that were chasing the Americans south and held them off for a while with destroyer gun fire. But we were in no particular danger ourselves. We stayed there too long, in my opinion. My ship was there ten and half months. It’s just too long. In peacetime, I wouldn’t mind that. In fact, in World War Two, I was away much longer than that. I didn’t mind because we were actually, you know, in action doing things. But the Korean War, it was a, for me, it was a boring thing.
Description

Mr. Welland discusses his deployment to Korea as captain of HMCS Athabascan, and describes doing primarily humanitarian intervention. He relates one incident wherein HMCS Athabascan provided naval bombardment to aid an American retreat.

Robert Welland

One of five children, Robert Welland was born in Oxbow, Saskatchewan on March 7, 1918. His parents immigrated to Canada from England, where his father had been an officer in the British Merchant Navy. Influenced by his father, Mr. Welland decided at the age of 14 that he would some day be a warship’s captain and an admiral. In 1936, he joined the Royal Canadian Navy, but had to go to England and join the Royal Navy in order to obtain officer training. His first active wartime service was aboard the F class destroyer, HMS Fame. Aboard her, he was involved in the rescue of survivors of the Athenia sinking, and the destruction of U-353. Mr. Welland then joined HMCS St. Laurent; she took part in the Dunkirk evacuation and the rescue of survivors from the Arindora Star torpedoing. In 1943, he assumed captaincy of HMCS Assiniboine; this vessel was involved both in convoy duty and harassing German shipping in the English Channel. Captain Welland remained in the Canadian Navy, and took HMCS Athabaskan into service during the Korean War, assisting in the NATO blockade there. He was later to become Commanding Officer of naval airbase CFB Shearwater, and his distinguished career saw him retire with the rank of rear admiral. He had fulfilled his boyhood dream! Mr. Welland later had great success as an entrepreneur, retiring at the age of 82.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
3:23
Person Interviewed:
Robert Welland
War, Conflict or Mission:
Korean War
Branch:
Navy
Units/Ship:
HMCS Athabascan
Rank:
Second Lieutenant
Occupation:
Anti-submarine officer

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