Maturity from war experience
Heroes Remember
Transcript
I got TB, yeah, and they traced it back to that, remember I told
you that German ack-ack place? Going into their barracks and
sleeping in their beds and we didn't disinfect them. They should
have been done and they figured I got it in there.
Well, they sent me home, I wasn't long going home then.
Oh, it was good because, well, my dad had had a heart attack so
he needed all the help he could get so I never had any time to
feel sorry for myself or anything and I got passes from the
hospital and I, well, he had a dairy barn and I could do the
milking for him. We got along quite well, it was good to
be home, really.
Oh, I grew up, I was more mature, a way more mature. Like, coming
home and going with the guys that I had known before that didn't
go in the army, they were very immature compared to us.
Oh, like little things bothered them. You know so and so did
this and did that, you didn't have that anymore. In the army you
pretty well learned to put up with everything that goes on that's
not in your power to change.
Description
Mr. Ney talks about his return home, and how the war changed him.
Ken Ney
Mr. Ney was born in Stratford, Ontario on 21 September 1923. His father was a farmer so the Depression didn't really affect his family. He began his training in Chatham. Mr. Ney joined the signal corps and was also a dispatch rider during his service. Mr. Ney volunteered to stay for another year after the war but contracted TB and was sent home.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 01:47
- Person Interviewed:
- Ken Ney
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Europe
- Branch:
- Army
- Occupation:
- Signalman
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