POW work as a Riveter
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Ah, the Japanese lined us up and they gave us numbers, okay. My
number was 209 and, and there were, there were 250 of us,
Canadians. So there were 250 numbers. So they said alright
from number 1 to number 42 you're going to be plate workers,steel
plate. From number x to number z you're going to be something
else. When it came to me, my thing, they said you're going to
be a riveter. My question is "What is a riveter?" they said
"Well we'll show you". I, I, I had only seen a ship when I was
transported over there and another one when I went to Japan
and that was my knowledge of, of, of the sea and much less
working in a shipyard.
So, I, I got to take a little bit of time to tell you about this
because some of it is a bit, a bit amusing. Anyway, after all
this thing was done, the numbering allo, number allocation
and the job allocation, we were taken to the shipyard. So, I
forget maybe it was 3 or 4 miles whatever it was and then you had
to jog to the shipyard. And we got to the, we got to the
shipyard and a whole bunch of the Japs. Everybody's talking
Japanese, don't know. They'd, they'd go blah, blah, blah, and
don't know. Anyway, with my group there were 3 or 4 of these
Japanese detached themselves from the group and they came towards
us. So we said to ourselves these guys must be bosses of some
sort, okay. And they turned out to be foremen and my two foremen
one was Gus and the other one we called him Geeco. Geeco is a
Japanese word which means trouble. I'll tell you later why
we call him Geeco.
Anyway, these people didn't speak a word of English nor did we
speak a word of Japanese. They proceeded to teach us how to be a
riveter. This would have made a movie for John Cleese anytime
because it was, it was a hilarious, a hilarious scene.
These people trying to use body language and hand signs to
describe the action of a pneumatic tool, such as a riveter.
Never mind explaining the whole pneumatic, you know, delivery
system nor explaining what you do with the bloody piece that you
have in your hand. What, what's the end result of this? And this
took some time, you know. And as I say, some of it was hilarious
I forget, I was going to cover another point. Piggy back on
this, on, on, on this here.
Interviewer: Did this have to do with gerco or the?
Yeah Geeco. Okay one of, one of the foreman the, the Geeco which
is the Japanese word for trouble. He was a good guy. We
considered him a good guy because whenever he saw the guards
coming, the armed guards or, or, or tai tai cho or somebody
coming, he would run to us and say geeco, geeco, geeco and he'd
motion for us to hide behind a plate or behind a bulkhead. So
we called him Geeco. We didn't know what the hell the word geeco
meant. We, we figured that geeco was a good word you know and we
called, he was a good guy and we called him trouble, which is a,
which is an irony of sorts you know.
But anyway, coming back to, coming back to work we finally,
within a rivetting crew , it's made up of a hammer man, the
biker, the guy on the forge, the fireman and the pitcher. Okay.
So you have the forge over there and you're rivetting over in
that corner over there. Alright. So the fireman, he's the rivet
has long pair of, of, of tongs, takes the rivet and he flips the
rivet in the air and depending how strong his arm is, that rivet
would travel quite a distance and the catcher would catch that
rivet. Alright. And he will place that rivet in the hole.
And the bunter or the biker has a hammer with a blunt head or
with a, with a rivet shaped head and goes up against that, that,
that, the rivet and the guy with the hammer's on the other side
and he rivets that white hot rivet against the plate. That
was my job. I was a hammer man. I weighed 89 pounds. The hammer
was, weighed almost as much as I did, but anyway and I got to be
damn good riveter by the way.
Description
Mr. Cyr describes his work as a riveter in the shipyard at Camp 3D.
Roger Cyr
Roger Cyr was born on March 6, 1922 at New Richmond in the Gaspé region of Québec. He was the oldest of nine children. His siblings were four brothers and four sisters. His father was a lineman for an electrical company in the United States. He eventually returned to Canada and worked as a chef with Canadian National Railways. Roger enlisted in late 1941 with the Royal Rifles of Canada. In late October 1941, he and hundreds of other members of the Canadian Army left Vancouver, arriving in the British colony of Hong Kong on November 14, 1941.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 06:00
- Person Interviewed:
- Roger Cyr
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Hong Kong
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Royal Rifles of Canada
- Occupation:
- Runner
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