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Ambush Luck

Heroes Remember

Transcript
I'll tell you how lucky, how lucky people can be. Our whole battalion was marching down a road about five yard intervals of course, you know, you can imagine how long a row of people that would be and all of a sudden the side of the road was a bank and here it was, “putt, putt, putt.” A machine gun had opened up and it swept down the whole row of our company, “D” Company. Everybody hit the ditch and it took about 20 minutes or so, they sent the last corporal and a Bren gunner from the last section out to... A fellow and a machine gun in a barn loft had raked the whole battalion, or our company. One person got one little crease behind the leg of all those bullets, you know, and it was about 20 minutes or so before we could get up and move again, but that's how lucky, what luck is. He could've just as easy as hit 50 knees out of that, you know. So that's luck.
Description

Mr. MacLeod describes how his entire battalion is strafed by a German machine gunner as they walk down a road, with only one man being hit in the heel.

Malcolm MacLeod

Malcolm MacLeod was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan on March 21, 1923, and was one of three children. Despite his father being a rural school teacher, he had to complete grade twelve via correspondence. Mr. MacLeod enlisted in the army rather than the air force in the spring of 1943, and the army performed hernia surgery which he couldn't personally afford. He was quickly sent overseas to reinforce post D-Day efforts in France, joining the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders. Mr. MacLeod's war service ended near Antwerp, Belgium when his leg was badly fractured during a shelling.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
1:14
Person Interviewed:
Malcolm MacLeod
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Battle/Campaign:
Northwest Europe
Branch:
Army
Rank:
Private
Occupation:
Infantryman

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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