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The Dead Zone

Heroes Remember

Transcript
The beginning of the war they had, I think it was Lockheed Hudsons they had. Brought them in, they were bombers fixed with 200 pound bombs they carried mostly. We got one down in our lounge downstairs on the wall, it's not loaded of course. But they carried those and they would go out to, till they hit the dead zone, what they called. They'd go so far. Their, their fuel would only take them so far out to follow the convoys. And just out in that dead spot, from there it was, I don't know how many miles from there before you went to England, and then the English, some of the English planes would come around, they worked long range, they come over. So there was a dead spot of so many miles that that's where the wolf packs, the submarines stayed. And there was a field day with them, when those convoys come through, they'd let go, it was a field day for knocking them them off. I remember one sailor told me or he was actually a captain of a ship, they requested that the British would put some long range bombers to come over and the, Air Marshall Tedder was the head of the air force that time, British. And he said, "No, we can't let them go, we need them all for going over to Europe." So poor thinking on his part. I mean they could have taken a couple of those planes and would have saved one hell of a pile of lives and also get a lot more equipment over to England. But those, these ships were sunk with the equipment and all the stuff they needed over there for the war effort.
Description

During the Second World War, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean there was an area known as the Dead Zone. Mr. Doolan tells us about the dangers that loomed underwater for unprotected ships crossing the area.

William G. Doolan

Mr. Doolan was born in Sydney, Nova Scotia on May 2, 1930. He grew up during the Second World War knowing that his brother had been made a prisoner of war. When Mr. Doolan was old enough, he joined the militia and in 1950 enlisted in the army to go fight in Korea. After completing his training in Petawawa, he was sent for further training in Japan, and then to the front where he was a rifleman for the infantry. Aside from a bout of malaria, he escaped unscathed and returned home to his family.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
01:35
Person Interviewed:
William G. Doolan
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Location/Theatre:
Canada

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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