I was wounded in Normandy before, well, just as, between Caen
and Falaise, when there was a break out. We had taken over
new positions, and this was at night, I think, about midnight
or one o’clock in the morning, and we had to dig in.
Well, we only got dug down about six inches, at least my friend
and I did, when it was either a bomb or a big shell come over
and exploded. And it wasn’t deep enough, and I got this big
chunk of shrapnel right between the shoulder blades. And it
went under my shoulder blade and it lodged in my side, though
I didn’t know it was there. You know it didn’t hurt at all.
It hit so hard, that it numbs your nerves I guess, you know.
But I lay there, and I could feel the blood running down my back.
Now, if I get up, maybe I’ll get hit again. If I stay there,
maybe I’ll bleed to death. Now, that’s just what goes through
your mind. So, I finally jumped up and I went to another trench.
And they cut my battle dress up the back, and put on a field
dressing. And I stayed there for about a half an hour,
until things quieted down. And then a guy come for me.
He walked in from a jeep. I had to walk about half a mile to
a jeep, quarter or half a mile at night, you can’t tell. Climbed
in beside the driver and went to a first field dressing station,
and it wasn’t until then it started to hurt a bit. Then, they put
me on a stretcher and give me a shot of something, maybe morphine
I don’t know. And from there, they took me to a field hospital,
that’s further back behind the lines. Not too far in Normandy,
‘cause we still weren’t far from the coast.
And I lay there until morning. And then, two orderlies come in,
oh it would be about six, seven o’clock, with a big pair of
shears apiece, and they took my boots off. And then they just
started each side, and cut my uniform and underwear,
everything right off. And this was so that they could take the
top off, ‘cause they don’t know how bad you’re hurt, you know?
Is it blood? And rolled me on a stretcher.
And I didn’t come to until sometime around noon, I guess.
I had been operated on, and I was laying there in a nice
clean bed, clean sheets, first time for quite a while. And the
medical officer come around. He seen I was awake, and the first
thing he said to me, “Boy,” he says, “you sure are a lucky guy.”
I says, “What do you mean? This is lucky? Laying here?”
He says, “Wait until I show you what I took out of you.”
So, when you’re wounded they have a little white bag they hang
on your bed, with a pocket knife, and your wallet, you know,
or anything, personal belongings and any pieces of shrapnel
that’s big enough to keep. So he took it out and showed me.
He says, “You’re lucky., Iif that had been jagged, instead of
a smooth detonator holder that screwed into the nose,” he said,
“it would have went right through you.” So there you are.
It kind of slid around under the skin.