Sendai in the Mine
Heroes Remember
Transcript
We all named the Japanese by nicknames.
When we landed up in Sendai area,
that was a coal mine and
the man that introduced us,
he was a mine manager and
he spoke to us to tell us about
what we were going to face.
Now we did have miners with us from
Cape Breton, not very many and from Ontario,
coal miners, and he lined up and he said,
"Now I don't want you to be scared,"
through the interpreter,
"I don't want you to be scared."
And he said, "I worked in the mines thirty years,"
and he said, "look at me how rugged I am."
He had a neck about that big,
we nicknamed him "The picture of health."
He went and there was a gypsy, and
there was some fellows, they were rough fellows,
they were rough.
To go down in that mine,
it was an awful feeling.
I'll never forget going into that mine.
It's a clammy feeling
with a g-string on, nothing hardly on your feet.
You had to produce so much coal a day.
I'm telling you it was devastating.
And medical fields that I don't think
that they ever realized
how tough that was.
I'm saying that because I remember that well.
You have no idea how rough
that was down in that mine.
Description
Mr Law remembers working in the mine and explains what the conditions were like.
Reginald Law
Reginald Law was born on April 13th, 1920 in Flatland, New Brunswick. His father took sick from his job as a fish warden so Mr. Law was called to work during grade eight to fill in as a fish guide until he joined the army when he was nineteen. He enlisted at Valcartier, Quebec and joined the Royal Rifles of Canada.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Recorded:
- February 10, 1998
- Duration:
- 1:25
- Person Interviewed:
- Reginald Law
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Hong Kong
- Battle/Campaign:
- Hong Kong
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Royal Rifles of Canada
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