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Description
Transcription
We did a lot of, oh, different types of shoots and as it went along we got more and more training, eventually got us trained up so, like with a gun crew of six. I was a driver and everybody could take everybody else’s position. Take the sergeant’s position and so on just in case we had a casualty so everybody knew how to handle things. By this time, as I said, we got ourselves trained up pretty good. I remember one shoot we were on in Alfriston. What they called a predicted shoot, and our officer, Captain Moore was his name. He was in charge of the shoot. So he fired one round and they set up, oh it was a tank, water tank probably three feet across maybe 10 or 12 feet long. That damn thing landed right in the centre of it. We had surveryors. They went in and surveyed and did all the mathematics and what have you for it and then all you did was fire on it. It was a whole bunch of us in that, not just the gunners, the whole battery was involved in a thing like that. We were mobile but we got awful handy, you know getting in and out of positions and all that stuff, and then, oh I guess, in the latter part of ‘43 and ‘44 they started giving us quite a bit of unarmed combat training and that sort of thing, you know, so we had quite a lot of it.
Catégories
Training
Médium
Video
Propriétaire
Veterans Affairs Canada
Guerre ou mission
Second World War
Emplacement géographique
England
Personne interviewée
Ronald Allingham
Branche
Army
Unité ou navire
Royal Canadian Artillery
Occupation
Driver
Durée
1:51