Interviewer: Tell me if you can, Mr. Giovannetti, if you can,
what, where it was you got hit and how it happened.
This, just trying to figure out how they, how they would spell
Goirlie, it's G-O-I-R-L-I-E. It's not girl like we would
say but they called it Goirlie.
Interviewer: Goirlie?
Goirlie, yes. That's where, that's where my day ended right
there in Goirlie. We went across the canal there and over
a metal bridge and after blowing a few things up of course.
But we got out and there was a, there was a great big field,
I don't know how big it would be probably you could set Sydney
down in it, it looked to me that big. And we got off of the road
and went in along the bush, a bunch of bushes that was there
and when we got to the end of the bushes we got bang.
They were waiting for us to stick our nose out... Germans with a
big Panther tank and an 88 on it for a gun which the 88's
were used for shooting down planes, eh. We didn't have, we didn't
have anything to compare with them fellas when it come to guns.
Interviewer: So it was the 88 that hit the Sherman? Your Sherman?
In one side and out the other, yeah. Do you know what saved
my life? I sat in the gunner chair like this until everything
stopped quiet and all the bullets stopped hitting the machine,
the tank. And, of course, the other fellas were gone then.
The young fella that used to be on this side of the gun,
loading it, he had thirteen seconds, he had it timed that's how
it took, long it would take him to get out of the thing.
And they told you this because if it was a gasoline motor and you
got hit with, that all them sparks flying around down there
it's going to go up eh. He went out too quick. And of course the
crew commander had to go with him or ahead of him to let him out
so I sat there and saved my life. But, I didn't, I didn't get
free of not gettin' hit. I had, I was laying on the ground there
alongside of it. They fired probably a half a dozen shells into
the tank after they put it out, after we got out of it. And some
of that stuff hit me too while I was there. I have three pieces
of steel hit me right up here in the back of the neck, one of
them was in there, in me for twenty years. And I'm crippled
because of this too, I had another piece through there. I had
twelve scalp wounds on this side of my head where the stuff hit
me, that was after I got up and took off out of there across the
field, I did get up out of there and run. Got in a ditch about
here down to the water probably. But that wasn't all.
This happened at about eleven o'clock in the morning,
they never got me out of there until supper time. So I lost a lot
of blood, and nobody around. And it was then that I found out
that the driver was alive, I heard somebody hollering and I
looked around and he was in the ditch behind me. And he says,
"Just stay put, John, I'm coming to get a hold of ya."
So he saved my life. So from then on it was hospitals,
that was the end of my fighting.