Duty onboard the HMCS Kootenay

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Description

Mr. Nordlund speaks about his enjoyment onboard the HMCS Kootenay, a passenger boat used to pick up people and escort submarines back to port.

Transcription

When the war ended, then I was on the Kootenay then what we did, we just went back and forth full speed, 30 knots cause she was a river class destroyer. And we picked up people in England, from either one of the ports, took them right across to Canada, we were just a passenger boat. I just loved that. Thirty knots each way, nothing to worry about, no war problems, nothing. What we did is we disbursed the convoy, said you’re on your own now. The submarines all surfaced and gave their positions and the convoy was disbanded and all the ships proceeded independent to where they were going and if you were given a group of submarines to escort into a port you did that, if not you did whatever you were told to do. Some of them were told just to return to port. In our case we took submarines, we took six of them into, I think it was six, I’m not sure of the number now into St. John’s, Newfoundland. I remember talking to some of the German crews afterwards. They could talk better English than I could. You know the war was over, there’s no sense bearing animosity and, I wasn’t actually falling in love with them but I was glad to see them and let them know that I wished them well and they wished us well. They went their way, we went our way. But we didn’t, anytime we picked up fellows during the war we didn’t treat them that well, they were prisoners of war and they were treated like that. We didn’t mistreat them, but we didn’t baby them either.

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