Old Fashioned Canadian Christmas at Sea (Part 2 of 2)
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Hey we were young, I was 18 then you see and
the majority of the crew were all the same. There were very,
very, very few people that were old and had the backgrounds, you
see. Anyway, one of the highlights I would like to tell you
about, I interviewed the, interviewed the captain, Admiral de
Wolfe in Ottawa and years ago when I was out here I was
president of the Haida Association and so I had organized two
reunions here; one in 1980 and one in 1990 and I had to sort of
help him along, he and his wife Gwen, and I got to know them
very well. So every time I went to Ottawa I always went and had
tea with him or had a beer with him. The last time I went there
of course his wife, Gwen had passed away and he said, "You know,
I harken back to that Christmas day." He said, "I always
remember the Germans going down on the ships that we sunk and I
used to think we like Christmas, think about all those families
that are going to be doing without their fathers," and so on.
And this is what he told me. Then he said, he said, "The
highlight of the whole thing," of course we'd been ordered to go
along side the Sheffield and have a Christmas day with them and
I said "No we'll have a Canadian Christmas." "Fine." Later in
the afternoon he got called up to go along side and meet C&C
Burnett and come and have Christmas drink with him and so he
went over. It was darker than Egypt's night, the coxswain was
along side waiting for him to come off and they were told to lay
off, so we layed off from the ship, from the quarter deck of the
Sheffield. Finally we called along side and the Captain went on
board and the coxswain said "Where to sir?" He said, "Back to
the ship." He just said "Where's that?" He said, "Never mind,
never mind," he said, "get away from the ship, now shut her
down." They got about a mile away, shut down the motor and they
listened and they could here way off in the distance, "Roll me
over in the clover," in marked Canadian accents. He said
"That's the way, that way." So that was,
that was one thing that he told me about.
Description
Mr.Hannam talks about his time spent with Harry de Wolfe on that particular Christmas.
Jack Hannam
Mr. Hannam was born in Vancouver, BC on June 19, 1924. At the age of five, shortly after his father's death, he moved to Victoria. His father survived the sinking of the HMCS Charlottetown in the St. Lawrence River but was tragically run down by a drunk driver. He started with the Merchant Marine at the age of 15 and then went on to the navy when he was 17. He joined the reserves Sept. 9, 1941. He served first on the HMCS Camrose and later on the HMCS Haida in both the North Atlantic and off North Africa.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:10
- Person Interviewed:
- Jack Hannam
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Atlantic Ocean
- Branch:
- Navy
- Units/Ship:
- HMCS Haida
- Occupation:
- Seaman
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