Description
John Angus MacLean
Mr. MacLean’s father was a farmer in eastern Prince Edward Island. His grandfather came to Canada from Scotland in 1832. Mr. MacLean had three brothers and four sisters. Two of his brothers died, one at the age of fiveand the other at the age of about one year. For the first two years of his higher education, Mr. MacLean attended Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick. He went on to the University of British Columbia for his third year of study on a one-year scholarship, majoring in chemistry. In 1938, he returned to Mount Allison University to complete his studies and graduated in 1939. Following graduation, he answered a newspaper advertisement placed by the Royal Air Force for a short-term commission with the RAF. He was chosen as one of two successful Canadian candidates. But, before he could leave for England, the Second World War had started and he was offered a commission in the Royal Canadian Air Force, which he accepted. Mr. MacLean’s bomber was brought down over Germany and he and his crew were forced to bail out. Mr. MacLean landed just inside occupied Holland and was moved along the Comet Line through Holland, Belgium and France to freedom in Spain. He’s an excellent story-teller with emphasis on detail. Mr. MacLean also had an outstanding post-war career as a politician. He served for 10 terms as a Member of Parliament and a term as Premier of his home province of Prince Edward Island.
Transcript
Interviewer: But the bad news from your perspective, Mr. MacLean was...
Well...
Interviewer: ...that the Comet Line had been betrayed.
Yes and three of the people that had helped me had been executed by firing squad. One of them was Eric de Menten de Horne, who was one of the guides we had from Brussels to Paris and he was an only remaining son, he belonged to a family who had two sons originally, but one of them joined the RAF and was killed in an accident in North Africa, and then Eric belonged to the Comet Line and he was captured or betrayed or something and was condemned to death, killed by, executed by a firing squad. And then Davey’s father was executed, he was captured in, in Paris and executed in the same way, and then the third one was the priest who had been my guide in, in Holland and I, in my story about my wartime years, I, I quoted the letter he wrote to his parents before he was shot, he was executed in Utrecht, six o’clock one morning. Very sad. They were gallant people.