72 Hours on a Raft in the North Atlantic
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Somewhere in the North Atlantic, and about, oh probably, it would
take you twenty-eight to thirty-two days to cross the Atlantic.
And it was somewhere in the North Atlantic, I don’t know exactly
where because, I mean, I was doing my work and the officer
was, the second mate was, the navigator and the captain, the
first mate was and everything and then the captain was the, the
big boss, you know. But, yeah, I was hit. And then the cover
didn't have time to come in, that submarine came on the inside,
and then, I mean it fired. I mean you could see the fire, day in
and day at night. Well I, was so much noise in the engine room
and then the galley and for the fire. I’m partly deaf today from
that, you know. And then, yeah the ship was hit and then I don’t
know how long I was unsure, kind of knock out, I mean everybody
left by the time I wake up and I make for the raft. And the boat
was all gone. But thanks was a raft left. I used a raft, and I
was 72 hours on a raft.
Interviewer: By yourself?
By myself. All by myself. You might heard, they call a fellow
was in a mine he said, “God take care of ya.” That’s what I was
just thinking, you know whatever happen, and once in a while I
used to ask my mother, “I would like to see you again.” That’s
the part that kind of hurt though. Yeah. I didn’t know if I
could make or not you know. But I wasn’t worried. It was food on
board and part of the raft was sixteen feet long by twelve feet
wide and then, you can’t sink them. It was April the 22nd and
it was cold. It was cold. Yeah, no doubt I think it was cold,
yeah. Yeah that’s in 1943, ‘44, ‘43 yeah. I was rescued
because when we go over, we go by convoy, so all the fighter, the
Corvette and the destroyer, the mine-sweeper followed the convoy.
But on the way back we on our own. So we about twenty-five, oh
maybe fifty mile off the line, so they come back and then I was
picked up by the American boat. The American ship was coming in
yeah. And I land up in Ellis Island in New York... was badly
bruised, badly hurt you know, but not bad. I was there for thirty
one days I guess, and shipped back in Halifax, back out again.
They have to. You have to go.
I mean they made you. They want you to go.
Interviewer: Were you nervous about going out again?
No, I don’t think so. No, I don’t think so. The war’s still not,
not over yet, no. We was always, always fighting. From the time
we leave Halifax until the time we get to England. And then,
that was I mean all day, all night. Everything was I mean, so
hard to explain. Pretty hard to explain. I was only sixteen at
the time, you know. You see salt water will not freeze, but we
would have a storm, a snow-storm and rain that build up on the
ship. And that was just as bad as a torpedo. Just as bad. Have
to chop, the cable and the winch and everything get full of ice
so you have to cut up and then so you take the weight off, so he
don’t come off, the stern don’t come off the, off the water.
Description
Mr. Kenny recalls a time in April of 1943, when his ship was hit and he spent 72 hours alone on a raft in the North Atlantic.
Gil Kenny
Gil Kenny was born in Saint Rose, New Brunswick in December of 1923. His father worked as a blacksmith. Mr. Kenny was 16 when the war started and joined the Merchant Navy, because he was too young for the other services. During one of his crossings, his ship was torpedoed and he was adrift for 72 hours in the Atlantic. After being rescued, he returned to service on the HMS Sheffield.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 04:03
- Person Interviewed:
- Gil Kenny
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Atlantic Ocean
- Branch:
- Merchant Navy
- Occupation:
- Cook
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