Good Food On Board Ship
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Well, we were lucky in Sioux because we had a cafeteria-style,
one of the first ones, a cafeteria-style messing as opposed
to broad side messing where everyone, every mess goes to the
galley and gets it in a, in a dish, sort of thing, and the only,
the only problem we had with, with food was we, we had stored,
my, my chief was very dedicated, George van Haff, and as soon as
we came into harbour, we stored ship. American stores were
excellent, you know. They were, they were getting stores in like
the Canadian Navy's getting now, which is really good. But he, he
stored the ship and we went back out on patrol right away,
and then Cayuga came out and Cayuga was, had the Captain Tees
the senior commander in the, our squadron, and he said,
"Well, you got, you've stored and I got more guns than you and
I'm senior to you so you transfer your stores to us and we'll let
you go back to Sasebo and restore." Well, that sounded reasonable
enough and we transferred all our fancy American stores to him
and we departed and we were gone for four hours when they came
back and said, "You can't go to Sasebo. You gotta stay out here.
You, you'll store off a British Cruiser." So we went and
(inaudible) transferred stuff from HMS Belfast and there
was sides of mutton coming up over and they were as big as sides
of beef. And George van Haff said, "We took them on board off the
starboard side and we walked right across the ship and threw them
them in the water on the port side." Nobody in the Canadian Navy
liked mutton. When we were in training, new entry training,
we could tell the day of the week by the menu and I think it was
Saturday we always had mutton. Well, they cook it about 6:00 in
the morning and by the time they serve it at 11:30,
it's all grease, you know. Just terrible.
But other than that, the food was good.
Description
Mr. White remembers the quality of the food on board HMCS Sioux.
William White
Mr. White was born Feb. 12, 1930. His father, a coal miner by profession, fought in both the First and the Second World Wars. The family moved to Nanaimo when Mr. White was about 1 year old. From a very young age Mr. White had wanted to join the Navy. He realized that dream when he enlisted on March 1, 1948. He set sail from the West Coast on the HMCS Sioux for Korea, in June of 1950. On the way to Korea they stopped in Hawaii to receive some anti-submarine training. Bt he says they never really received much training until they came under American control in Korea.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:02
- Person Interviewed:
- William White
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Korean War
- Location/Theatre:
- Waters off South Korea
- Battle/Campaign:
- Korea
- Branch:
- Navy
- Units/Ship:
- HMCS Sioux
- Occupation:
- Storekeeper
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