Transfer to the Norwegian Army
Heroes Remember
Transcript
I was transferred to the Norwegian Army almost immediately after
landing in Britain in the very early days of 1944. The reason I
was attached to the Norwegian Army is that I had, always had a
strong interest in Scandinavia and Scandinavian countries and so
they could see that from what I had been doing and working at
and so on and so forth. Well I was primarily involved with the
heavy water plant in Norway. It was built in the mountains
northwest of Oslo. I was attached to the Norwegian Army during
the first half of 1944 and my primary, I was primarily involved
with the German heavy water plant, in other words that was one
of their main, main goals in Norway, getting the heavy water
plant and developing it. That’s all their research work was
based on, on that cooling system, ahead of their research work
in, on a nuclear side, of scouting the Norwegian heavy water
plant work and it was almost impossible to bomb it out. Every
effort had been made in that direction of business, it was such
a solid rock, mountain. And it was just one of many, so that
aircraft could not fly in low and attack it from the sides you
might say. It had to be strictly from above. And that was very,
very difficult because of the nature of the country, and the
mountain. And that particular plant, it was built well into the
base of the mountain and you could never be certain
as to how effective bombings were. So our job was to do that.
Description
Mr. Heward explains his transfer from the Canadian Army to the Norwegian Army and his duties surveying the German heavy water plant in Norway.
Richard Heward
Mr. Heward was born on March 18, 1922 in Montréal, Québec. As a child he dreamed of becoming a pilot or navigator. Upon graduation from high school, he had hoped to go to England to study aeronautical engineering, but the outbreak of war changed those plans. Mr. Heward tried to join the air force, but his impatience with the long delays led him to join the army. After the D-Day invasion, he was transferred to the Norwegian Army to survey the heavy water plant in Norway that had been used by the Germans to assist in their nuclear research.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 03:39
- Person Interviewed:
- Richard Heward
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Europe
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- 17th Duke of York's Royal Canadian Hussars-Recce
- Occupation:
- Reconnaissance Officer
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