Arriving in Hong Kong
Heroes Remember
Transcript
We didn't go to Hong Kong when we landed,
we landed in Kowloon.
We didn't go to Hong Kong until after
the war had started. And I was a Bren Gun operator
so we had to get to where our Bren Guns,
we didn't have them in our quarters.
All we had was our rifles in our quarters,
them Lee Enfield Rifles.
So we went to Hong Kong and they issued
our Bren Guns and we got our ammunition.
And we were all posted up in different
areas on the Hong Kong side.
I was up at one Wai Shun Gap just above
the reservoir and then I stayed there for the
whole duration of the...
Interviewer: “ So you were there...
”I was there for two weeks.
Interviewer: “Okay!”I was there. I was there
right beside a, and I was on a side
of the mountain in a pillbox and we were
watching down, see if anything would
move down below. And the aircraft was
bombing us from the air thinking
we had no aircraft at all.
That must of went on for oh five or six days.
Because we only fought 16 days altogether
and they must have been shelling
us all that time. They must have been
shelling us from the air,
from the sea and from the...
because we had no boats,
we had nothing.
Description
Mr Lynch talks about arriving in Hong Kong and where he was located after the Japanese attacked.
Wilbert Lynch
Wilbert Lynch was born in Portage, Manitoba on April 6th 1923 and was raised on a farm with two brothers and three sisters. He left home when he was 13 years old and worked for five dollars a month plus room and board at a few local farms. Three days after turning seventeen he joined the army and trained on the Bren gun in Camp Shilo and became a member of the 18th Manitoba Reconnaissance Battalion.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 1:34
- Person Interviewed:
- Wilbert Lynch
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Battle/Campaign:
- Hong Kong
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Winnipeg Grenadiers
- Occupation:
- Bren Gunner
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