Description
Mr. Huckerby describes convoying to England and being sent down to Bramshott Camp for quarantine and training.
John Arthur Huckerby
John Arthur Huckerby was born on February 8, 1898, in Golden Plain, North West Territory, (now a part of Saskatchewan). Prior to enlistment, Mr. Huckerby worked as a farm laborer. His sense of patriotic duty led him to enlist in the 217th Battalion at Broadview, Saskatchewan, on March 8, 1916, shortly after his 18th birthday. Mr. Huckerby’s basic training was interrupted when he fell ill with diphtheria. Although not fully recovered when the 217th was deployed to Britain, his officer interceded and took him as a convalescent. He was quarantined at Bramshott Camp for a time and then served as an instructor in bayonet drill and physical training. Mr. Huckerby joined the 46th Battalion, C Company and saw action at Lens, Amiens, Drocourt-Queant, and Canal du Nord. Although there is no record of his having been wounded, he was gassed during a night raid at Lens. He was discharged at the rank of corporal. After returning to Canada, he received a farm from the Soldier Settlement Board and later joined the Saskatchewan Civil Service. Mr. Huckerby enlisted for the Second World War, attaining the rank of sergeant. There is, at present, no record of his service in that conflict. On January 12, 1921, he married Katherine Anne MacDougall and had one son. Mr. Huckerby died on September 16, 1993.
Transcript
Very little happened. Only a few times we got a scare from a submarine and got called out in the middle of the night ready to take life boats because of submarines, but we never got hit. We had a good convoy. They encountered no mishaps on the way over. It took us seven days to go over. In Liverpool, we didn’t get a chance to see it at all because they got us out of there so fast. Then they took us to Bramshott and we were in what they called a segregation camp for three weeks. Made sure we hadn’t brought any foreign diseases with us, and so on. It was just like confinement, we weren’t allowed out of camp for all that length of time. That’s where they trained us for endurance test and long marching and what have you. That’s where it was decided who could go to France and who couldn’t, more or less. But they gave us then, that was in early June, and they kept us there then til, oh I think it was about the first of October before we got away. We weren’t very happy with it, but you know, they kept us alive and it was solitude. Nobody was very happy with it. We had trouble with a recruit there but we were under obligation to do as we we’re told.