Minefields
Heroes Remember
Transcript
One day as we were travelling along I noticed we were
travelling off the highway and I noticed little round rings in
front of me and I immediately knew what that was. That there's
teller mines planted there. So I hollered to stop and the tank
stopped and I looked and they were all around and we were lucky
not to have blown a track to get there. So I ordered my second
driver out to have a look and see where we were and I thought
that maybe if he could direct the tank back exactly in the track
that we came in on we'd have no problem. So Dusty come out and
was directing back and all of a sudden we ran over a teller
mine. It went off. Blew the track, my super was very close to
us. He was blown back riddled with stones.
I climbed out to have a, a look at him and he was lying there. I
said "You know he's dead." I went and I got the, the morphine.
We have morphine syringes in the, in the tank for, to use when
some person's badly burnt or something like that and I gave him
to them. He had an eye sort of hanging out and there's blood all
down his face was full of holes and just as I, he was saying,
"Am I hurt bad boss am I hurt bad?" I said, "No no Dusty, you
know, you're alright, you're in the pink. We'll take ya back and
be alright." And I thought well I wonder you know 3 minutes it's
all that he can last here and at that time I saw an ambulance
going along the road above us. So I stopped it and we got Dusty
and put him in the ambulance and went back to the, to the
hospital, and I went in with him. And ah, the doctors operated.
Oh on the way back, way down to the hospital he was saying, "Boss
I could really use a cigarette I could really use...". I
said "Okay". So I gave him a cigarette and he couldn't suck in
because the air was coming in his cheeks and he couldn't get a
drag and I held his cheeks like this, blocking the holes in his
face that he could get a drag on the cigarette. Got back to the
hospital, he went right into surgery. I had no means to
getting back to the unit and so they let me stay and sleep on the
stretcher there over night. Ah in the morning they told me that
they thought that Dusty would live.
Description
Mr. Murray speaks of the attempt to retreat from a mine field, and the tragic events that followed.
Robert Murray
Robert Murray was born in Toronto, Ontario on February 8, 1918. His father was Inspector of Detectives of the Toronto police force. Mr. Murray had six brothers and sisters. He was the second youngest.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 03:59
- Person Interviewed:
- Robert Murray
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- 48th Highland Regiment
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