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Travelling ahead of the pack (Part 2 of 2)

Heroes Remember

Travelling ahead of the pack (Part 2 of 2)

Transcript
So we, we took off, he kicked my foot, and I picked Sam Sangster, and Ed Bell and Henry Sprague. And I said, all for different reasons. Henry was much more stable than we were and Sam spoke good German. He was Icelandic from Winnipeg, and Ed Bell was beautiful, blond, pink skin, blue eyes, 5'10", a typical Aryan, and he was going to be very useful and so, and me. So off we went, and I had been trained for some of this... So anyhow, off we went, and we travelled all night, and all the next day, didn't stop. And we got, I figured that they couldn't move 2,000 guys on foot at much more than, if they could do two miles an hour it'd be a miracle. Whereas we could probably do, with the cart and everything else, we could probably do six or seven miles an hour. So we got well ahead of them. And when we got to a place where there was a bit of a hill, one guy, we all slept separately, one guy on the top kept awake and before we went to sleep I heard him say, "Dust cloud due west at full stop." He could see where they'd been walking, and we knew we still weren't far enough ahead. So oh, gosh. We slept on the ground, we slept apart and the guard in the meantime, he had to change horses and carts every two days because we didn't want anybody knowing what we were doing. And we were following the autobahn but on a country road, following the autobahn because I was afraid to get lost, anyhow, so it worked quite well.
Description

Mr. Weir describes how his group of four tried to travel ahead of the group of 2,000 in order to ensure that there would be food for them.

John Weir

Mr. Weir was born in Toronto on July 22, 1919. His father was DSO MC in the First World War, a colonel. He was machine gunner in the 19th Battalion, and was gassed at Vimy and suffered from then on with asthma. After seeing the horrific pictures of the trench warfare from his father's service, Mr. Weir decided to join the Air Force rather than serve in the trenches. He joined the service the day after war was declared and began his training in Winnipeg. He started off as a pilot officer-provisional but wanted to be a fighter pilot. During his service, Mr. Weir was shot down in Barth and captured. He was a prisoner in a Gestapo jail, and was involved in "The Great Escape from Stalag Luft III". He was moved to various prison camps and witnessed atrocities of the Holocaust. He eventually escaped on a forced-march from Bremerhaven to Lübbecke by bribing a German guard.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
02:05
Person Interviewed:
John Weir
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Location/Theatre:
Europe
Battle/Campaign:
Battle of Britain
Branch:
Air Force
Units/Ship:
401 Squadron
Occupation:
Pilot

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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