Leadership
Heroes Remember
Transcript
It's the not the type of thing...
I think you can't sit down and write out a formula and say if you
meet that formula you are going to be a good leader.
I, I found out, part of the... I think I became a good leader
and I think part of that was because when I was eighteen,
I had a guy for god sakes in the crew that joined the RAF the
year before I was born. I'm the youngest incidently of the ten
crew members, so you grow up in a hurry, and I think you have to
know your people. Now I work in a service club and have now for
45 years and one of the biggest tasks is to get the presidents
and that to realize that every member in their club is different
and you better have an ear for everyone of them. We'd go to,
I went to staff college and studied leadership. We left staff
college realizing you can't define it. You know, some people
say you either got it or you haven't got it. I don't know whether
it goes back that far into your genes or not.
I think consideration for people, I think being yourself,
not a lot of the things that they teach you out of a book, no.
And the other too, you know, I think you got to, you got to
live it, you know. I flew for 31 years. I'm sure it annoyed
my wife many, many a time, you know, because you always
had to go somewhere and they were always at the least
convenient time, but you do it.
And you set by example, I think is a part of leadership.
Description
Mr. Moore became a leader at the young age of eighteen. He expresses his thoughts about leadership, a big part being consideration for other people and knowing your people.
Ken Moore
Born in Rock Haven, Saskatchewan, Ken Moore was the youngest of eight children. His father died when he was very young and his mother raised the family on her own. After graduating from highschool, he hitchhiked to Vancouver, BC and joined the Air Force. During the war, he piloted 61 missions, in Liberators, on coastal escort duties and submarine patrols. During one such mission, his crew sank two U-boats in 22 minutes. Because of this act he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) and the Silver Star (by the US).
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:22
- Person Interviewed:
- Ken Moore
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Europe
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 224 Squadron
- Occupation:
- Pilot
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