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The Vickers Platoon

Heroes Remember

Transcript
We had a Mark 5 Sten gun. That's a, it had a, they were quite rare. They had a paratrooper down at the War Museum at one time, and I, they didn't have the proper Sten gun and they got it. It was, had wooden butts and wooden pistol grips. The Sten always had a bad reputation but when it was set up like that it was great little weapon, we were quite happy with it. It was just, it was just gas pipe and if you didn't take care of it, that's what, why the reputation was bad but it was because the operators weren't, weren't using them properly or weren't taking care of them. If you get them dirty, they'll jam, you know. And the other, we had the sons-of-bitches in Korea, too. Our fellas had to take the, the rounds out of the magazine because it was, it would, the platform would just stay down if you left them, they were a bad weapon. Just a bad weapon. We jumped Vickers too at the time. I had a friend who was in the Vickers Platoon. He's a doctor now in Kingston. But they were great, they gave us a great deal of fire power once we got on the ground, which airborne, we didn't have too much of, until we got going. I had a very good friend named Hlady, H-L-A-D-Y. That was one of the things about joining the army, I did not know Ukrainians existed. A friend of mine was a parole officer out in Shilo and he was visiting some farmhouse and got a blast of Ukranian and he said, "I don't speak Ukranian," and the farm wife said, "How long have you been in this country?" But Hlady and I were lying in a ditch, we did river crossings because we could go a for few miles until they got a bridge going and this particular spot there were some, it turned out there were Hitler Youth on 88's and they were snapping rounds at us. Hlady and I were lying in the ditch and one went past, having been to Camp, Camp Shilo in the artillery, it had a broken driving band and it was making a terrible, didn't sound like the rest of them, just an awful sound. And this guy, Hlady, said, "That one had a bayonet on it," which, lightened, lightened the life a bit, quite a bit.
Description

Mr. Kelly discusses the Mark 5 Sten Gun and his humorous friend Hlady.

Jeff Kelly

Mr. Kelly was born in Lindsay, Ontario, December 16, 1923. His father was a medical officer with a field ambulance in the First World War and received a Distinguished Service Order. Mr Kelly wanted to be an infantry man as his father had a great admiration for them. He joined the army on the 22nd of May in 1942. He served overseas with the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion which was part of the British 6th Airborne Division.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
02:35
Person Interviewed:
Jeff Kelly
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Location/Theatre:
Europe
Branch:
Army
Units/Ship:
British 6th Airborne Division
Occupation:
Intelligence officer

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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