And my posting came up, and of course the thirty of us, all go
down to Regent Park Zoo in London, which was the medical
headquarters. And so I didn't think that a zoo could be a medical
headquarters, but it was. And you lined up alphabetically,
all thirty, and the sergeant that was with you or corporal that
was with you, told you to march into this room when your name was
called. They call it "bong one up". Hand out your paper,
the squadron leader would sign it, hand it back to you,
you bonged another one up about turn and marched out.
Well "bong one up" is a salute, right? So my name came up and
I wasn't feeling too bright but I marched in and came rigidly to
attention and bonged him one up, and fell flat across his desk.
Out like a light. And I woke up in Regent Park Hospital and
apparently had a thing called vaccine flu. From the inoculations
that you had. And I was in there about ten days so I missed my
posting. So when I came out I had to have duties around the base
again. And then eventually I joined another thirty guys who were
short one and I went down to Babbacombe ITW. And while I was in
the hospital, I got a lot more incentive to drop bombs in Germany
We got bombed. Oh, really bombed while we were in London.
London was heavy at the time. And we were bombed, the hospital
was shaking and then the Junker's 88 hit the balloon cable,
spiralled around the balloon cable and crashed right behind the
hospital. And that was it was quite an experience. Windows going
out and everybody screaming and shouting. It was, it was a thing.
Interviewer: Were you frightened during that? (No. No.)
Interviewer: What feelings were you feeling?
Petrified and absolutely horrified and scared. Well, there is a
word for it, but I'm not going to use it, but I was, absolutely.
If there'd have been a bathroom available I would have gone
to it! But I couldn't. At the time the guy and I, two guys in
the next bed - the guy in the next bed to me also had vaccine flu
or vaccine fever. And when the sirens went off, the nurses ran
in with doctors and the orderlies and were dragging beds out of
the place and taking them down to the shelters. They were also
loading people who couldn't walk into wheelchairs and taking them
out, and guys on crutches were off. The doctor came in and says,
"You can't move these two guys." So the nurse that I had,
it was a French girl, she had been in Dunkirk and was a nurse in
France and she was attending wounded soldiers in Dunkirk,
when they evacuated the thing. And she actually was evacuated
with them. And she immediately joined the air force as a nurse.
She said, "I will stay with them." And she went and got a chair
and she put it between the two beds and she sat down and held our
hands. All through this bombing raid. And this building was
shaking. And you could hear glass flying. And then this Junker's
88 crashed right behind the building and blew up and she never
turned a hair, she just talked and talked and talked. And as soon
as that was finished she said, in her beautiful little French
accent, "I will be back in a moment," and she went and brought
back two sets of pyjamas and new sheets. I guess we sweat a
little bit while we were in there. At least that's what we
thought we were doing, was sweating. But I tell you, it was
scary. And that was my first experience of a hero.