Language selection


Search veterans.gc.ca

Getting Shot Down (Part 1 of 4)

Heroes Remember

Getting Shot Down (Part 1 of 4)

Transcript
We got badly wiped. We lost ten guys one day, out of twelve and we lost nine the next day. And the replacements were the guys that were flying the next day and the day after that, or two days after that, we took off again. The squadron was practically all replacements. There was, there was Jeep, myself and Ian, I think we were the only survivors. And, and Huey, and Huey was, Huey’s on leave. So, that’s why the new boys were, were flying and why they were flying so soon cause we were, we were short of aircraft and short of people and everything else. We lost these numbers, this number of people in a hell of a hurry and to be replaced with guys who had, they had more time than we did when we started on the Spits but they didn’t have any more time we had by the time they arrived. So, they were, they were duck soup and they, they didn’t have any, didn’t have time to practice flying with them, stuff like that. They’d had practice in at the OTU but that’s not the same as when your in Ops. And so, that’s how come I had a freshman right behind me. And, and I, it was, it was probably as much my fault as anybody’s because I was nursemaiding him and I should have been more aware of what was going on and that, and there’s the point about a guy who’s afraid. He’s nursing himself, see he’s not paying attention you know, and I was nursemaiding him. I was worried sick because I thought, and we, and a bunch of 'em got shot down, too.
Description

Mr. Weir recalls being shot down as a result of flying with many new recruits. He recalls that his attention was more focussed on helping the new recruits, rather than the flying.

John Weir

Mr. Weir was born in Toronto on July 22, 1919. His father was DSO MC in the First World War, a colonel. He was machine gunner in the 19th Battalion, and was gassed at Vimy and suffered from then on with asthma. After seeing the horrific pictures of the trench warfare from his father's service, Mr. Weir decided to join the Air Force rather than serve in the trenches. He joined the service the day after war was declared and began his training in Winnipeg. He started off as a pilot officer-provisional but wanted to be a fighter pilot. During his service, Mr. Weir was shot down in Barth and captured. He was a prisoner in a Gestapo jail, and was involved in "The Great Escape from Stalag Luft III". He was moved to various prison camps and witnessed atrocities of the Holocaust. He eventually escaped on a forced-march from Bremerhaven to Lübbecke by bribing a German guard.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
01:51
Person Interviewed:
John Weir
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Location/Theatre:
Europe
Branch:
Air Force
Units/Ship:
401 Squadron
Occupation:
Pilot

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

Related Videos

Date modified: