Training New Crew
Heroes Remember
Transcript
We trained, I think I’d be safe to say hundreds of new
ratings that hadn’t been at sea who went to learn something
about seamanship, a little bit about gunnery and some
of the things they needed to know when they were ready to go to
sea. Most of the sailors, the trainees that I ran into
were just like me, almost come out of the Saskatchewan
Prairies and everything was new to them. And it was exciting
and it was exciting to see them become such tars after all,
you know. We’d meet one or two of them, say, you’d say,
“I was on that ship. I was on that Sans Peur.
I was trained on that ship.” And you’d remember him,
you know, as a little guy that was scared and then now all
of a sudden he’s wearing his hat a little crooked and
they get used to it. I’ve had a lot of good guys on that
ship and the Navy is a little different than the Army
and the other places that you join. The Army you usually
stay together in a battalion, you stay together but in the Navy
you know, you’d get two or three guys drafted on the ship
for a while. They’re there for a month and then they go away.
I would think in the period that I was on that ship,
32 months at sea, I saw maybe a hundred, maybe more than
that have come on and went off, and I never saw them again
and you didn’t really have the comradeship that you have
sometimes in the Army where you, you know, your fellows are all
together and you always have a buddy in the trench
with you, you know, the guy that you know.
Description
Mr. Matheos describes the training of new recruits and the satisfaction of seeing them succeed. He discusses the fact that he didn't develop any lasting friendships because of the transience of the crew.
James Matheos
James Matheos was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan on September 9, 1924. He was one of three children. His father, a Greek immigrant, was a restaurateur. Mr. Matheos joined the Royal Canadian Navy in 1942, with the intention of “seeing the world.” After training in Victoria, British Columbia he served aboard HMCS Sans Peur, a converted British Admiralty yacht, and spent the war in the dual role of patrolling for U-boats off Halifax, and training naval recruits.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 2:05
- Person Interviewed:
- James Matheos
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Battle/Campaign:
- Battle of the Atlantic
- Branch:
- Navy
- Units/Ship:
- 415 Squadron
- Rank:
- Ordinary Seaman
- Occupation:
- Deck Crew
Related Videos
- Date modified: