German Tears Over a Cheap Watch
Heroes Remember
Transcript
One night we hooked onto a place,
it was quite a hard place to fight so that night
we went into it and we got a hold of this
and we captured a bunch of Germans there
and it was one fellow there I got a hold
of and I took his watch out.
He had one of them little watches
about that big, a dollar watch, and I took
that away from him and he cried and I said,
“Man, you're some glad that you,
all you would lose was that one little watch,
all that you would lose.”
I said you some glad. Well he looked at
me so funny, he says, “I guess you're right!”
Because there was a dozen of them around
him and the only thing that was holding
him from me was that I took something
from him and I was keeping
him from the other fellows.
Description
Mr. McLeod describes taking a number of German prisoners during an advance. He takes a cheap watch from a prisoner, who cries over the loss. Mr. McLeod reminds the captive that the outcome for him could have been far worse.
Russell McLeod
Russell McLeod was born on October 9, 1899 in Liverpool, Nova Scotia. His father was a fisherman, and prior to his enlistment, they fished together. Mr. McLeod joined the 219th Battalion in 1916 and trained at Camp Aldershot, Nova Scotia. He was sent overseas that fall, and joined the 25th Battalion in France. He served during Canada's 'Last Hundred Days', seeing action at the Hindenburg Line, Cambrai and Mons. After the armistice, he served as a member of the Occupation Army in Germany.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 1:02
- Person Interviewed:
- Russell McLeod
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- First World War
- Branch:
- Army
- Occupation:
- Signaller
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