Excitement of Going to War
Heroes Remember
Transcript
I never expected to have the send-off that we did.
It was like national pride suddenly erupted,
it was like a volcano like people were…
I remember being as a young guy we would go
downtown a lot, obviously young sailors and
that was the big thing, guys on those
three ships who were going,
like we’re going to war and everyone was like,
“Really, you’re going to war?”
Have a drink with us and t-shirts,
I remember buying it must have been
a thousand t-shirts off the ship with
Iraqnophobia Veteran on the back and
a picture of the Persian Gulf region
on the front and with the Persian Excursion
on it and I must have bought
about a thousand shirts that I just gave
away to people. Everyone wanted it,
everyone was there for it so it was great.
And then the morning we were leaving
because I was in there early.
A lot of preparation to get ready.
We had all of our gear to stow so we
were really early and I actually lived
on board at the time so up early,
obviously we’re going to sea.
It was the 24th of August and a beautiful
day and then you could start to see people,
there were a lot of families coming
down to the jetties and stuff but you
couldn’t see out of the dockyard but
then you could start to see on the bridge
where people were starting to line up
on the bridge and then the boats and
all the boats were sailing around and
suddenly it wasn’t just a few boats
it was like a flotilla, there seemed like
hundreds of small vessels.
And once we pulled away and then you
start to see more of the waterfront,
that’s people, Wow! I was, actually
I had tingles in my and I’m getting them again.
It blew me away,
it totally blew me away and
then when we finally left the harbour and
we got out of the mouth of the harbour
it was like, uh, I think now we
have to get on with it like now
it’s time to do the job.
So everything from that point on was,
it was just nose to the grindstone
type work, work, work, because we
worked up on the way over,
we had sea training with us and
they put us through everything.
We went action stations,fires, floods,
missile attacks, gas attacks, everything and
it was just nonstop until we
got over to Gibraltar and then
obviously we got out first port,
blow off steam and then, you know,
so but it was phenomenal,
the whole feeling was very phenomenal.
It was something I thought I would
never see in my life.
Description
After confirming his part in the Persian Gulf War, Mr. Mellor shares the sense of excitement felt gearing up and getting ready to go to sea.
Bruce Mellor
Mr. Bruce Mellor was born August 5, 1968 in Hamilton, Ontario. Always having the desire to join the military, Mr. Mellor joined the navy as ordinary seaman on board the HMCS Athabaskan. When instructions were given by the military to take part in the Persian Gulf War, he expressed his strong desire to be a part of this and spent his time at sea as a part of the engineering department with duties as stoker. With 20 years of military service, Mr. Mellor holds great pride for the contribution he made to the navy. Mr. Mellor now resides in Halifax with his family.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Recorded:
- February 27, 2016
- Duration:
- 2:47
- Person Interviewed:
- Bruce Mellor
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Canadian Armed Forces
- Battle/Campaign:
- Gulf War
- Branch:
- Navy
- Units/Ship:
- HMCS Athabascan
- Occupation:
- Stoker
Related Videos
- Date modified: