Language selection


Search veterans.gc.ca

Repairing Damaged Wires

Heroes Remember

Repairing Damaged Wires

Transcript
Yeah we had reels of wire that used to run along the ground and any place as out of sight of the enemy line, we'd some times put them over, up on trees, crossing crossroads, you know. Threw it on the tree and down the other side. So that's when you weren't in sight of the enemy line. Oh sometimes a shell would land on the line and cut it and or a bit of shrapnel or something like that. Maybe the enemy found it lying on the ground and they just snipped it to make sure that they'd break our communications. We had to go out and run the wire through our hands and we came to the end of it and we always went in twos. One fellow held the end and the other fellow scouted back and forth across until he found the other end and then we repaired it. Mostly in the night time. We couldn't do that in the daytime because it was too obvious.
Description

Mr. MacDougall describes the process of running telephone wires, the various ways wires could be severed, and having to repair after dark.

Alec MacDougall

Alec MacDougall was born on September 20, 1896 in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia. His father was a miner and also owned a farm. Mr. MacDougall finished grade 10, then worked at the local foundry until enlisting in the Army in 1916. His Battalion, the 185th Cape Breton Highlanders trained at Camp Aldershot, Nova Scotia before sailing to England aboard the SS Olympia. He deployed to France as a signaler with the 4th Division, and saw action most notably at Arras and Amiens.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
1:34
Person Interviewed:
Alec MacDougall
War, Conflict or Mission:
First World War
Branch:
Army
Units/Ship:
185th Cape Breton Highlanders
Occupation:
Signaller

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

Related Videos

Date modified: