Battle of The Somme
Heroes Remember
Transcript
We're in Belgium front.
They march us ten days, 20 miles a day and
our scouts getting billets for us everyday.
And when you take your boots off,
your heels were bleeding.
Those old army shoes.
If you struck it lucky found a nice little window,
window, open French woman's.
She come, especially if she could talk
French and I can. (Yes.)
Help me to bathe my feet and
everything and fix you up. (Very good.)
And get you good bed to sleep in,
if you could talk French. (Okay.)
You had to be, know that there was
little French in you. My mother was French.
My Father was Irish.
And they'd get billets for you ahead of time and
we did that for ten days and then at the end
of ten days they'd put us in box cars.
all going and horse manure in it and
they put us in that and we drove one
night till sometime next four doors.
Then we'd march in again from,
from where they took us out the,
the box cars and we struck the front
where they wanted us to be for,
for the bombs attack.
And this is where when one of
the village was bombed.
They had hit the, the statue on the church
where there was a (inaudible) on it.
And when it hit it, it tipped it
down and it tipped her down so when
we marched through the streets
underneath you'd swear she was our,
with her hands like that.
You'd swear she was there praying for us.
And the government man here that's
making that book,
I started to tell him about that.
Just a minute he said and he dug in his
"Oh you were there alright."
He had the picture of that. (Yes.)
Right in his book. Yeah, that was one
thing I remember real well.
Interviewer: So that was on your way to
the Battle of the Somme?
On the way. We had a good rest the next day.
The following day we went over the top.
Interviewer: And that was one of the
worst days of the?
Well, no. That wasn't the worst.
I think the worst battle they had was,
was Passchendaele. I mean for the condition
they had to go through and everything.
Yeah, but it was a battle, it was a,
it was quite a battle.
Interviewer: What do you remember specifically
about, what do you remember about
the Battle of the Somme yourself?
What do you remember?
Well remember when you get ordered you
get your ammunition if you're NCO.
You, your, your commander and sergeant
and company sergeant was there get your,
if you're a platoon sergeant or if you're in
charge of machine gun,
you get your stuff all ready,
piled up there and you got to lug it with you.
Your belt's full of ammunition, bombs,
sacks and everything and you go. (Inaudible)
everybody watched the whole division,
watched the whole time, the same time.
When they holler, everybody goes.
Interviewer: What was the signal?
Was it (Yeah, sure.) somebody shouting?
Well they had some signals yeah.
Well from one battalion to another they just holler.
Or no one place had a very loud bugler.
And he, he blew, blew something in it on my
left side I heard the bugle play.
And the minute that bugle everybody moved
(inaudible ) in the battalion.
Interviewer: Now you'd all go forward?
All go forward. I don't think the German
expected at all
Interviewer: Was the artillery still (well we)
going off in the distance?
When we got to the first of the German
trenches, there wasn't anything left at all.
All our artillery, our artillery was on each
side where I was standing would be
quarter of a mile long.
And they opened that up on and
the brigade out there and the machine gun
behind them (inaudible)over and the heavy artillery.
There was, there was nothing left.
Everything flattened. Once in a while you,
you might see a, a wounded man,
we, we wouldn't stop. "Carry on. Don't stop."
And, I forget how far back we pushed them
quite a few miles back and there were
places come over their trenches.
They had a lot of.. so, it was their trenches you see.
They'd retire from one.
They were all flattened out.
Interviewer: So as far as you can remember
you went by...
Far as I can remember
(inaudible) brought ‘em back. (Okay.)
From where we had got orders to stop.
Interviewer: And were there many of your unit
hurt or injured or killed?
Oh, well you wouldn't know because
you weren't allowed to stop and help your,
your buddy because he's wounded.
You had to go. I'll never know.
But our losses were quite heavy, but we,
we took our objective what,
what we were to do.
It was a Canadian affair you see.
Yep we took er'.
Description
Mr. Downey recalls his further experiences during the Battle of the Somme in Belgium.
Philip Downey
Philip Downey was born on January 28, 1891 in Shemogue, New Brunswick. His father was a carriage-maker and a farmer. When the First World War began, Mr. Downey was working in an automobile factory in Amherst, Nova Scotia. In the Autumn of 1914, he enlisted in the 26th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Following basic training in Saint John, New Brunswick, he sailed to England for further training. Late in the autumn of 1915, he joined the Canadian troops in France, attached to the 5th Brigade. Mr. Downey was 105 years old when he was interviewed in 1996.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 06:28
- Person Interviewed:
- Philip Downey
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- First World War
- Battle/Campaign:
- Battle of the Somme
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- 26th Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force
- Rank:
- Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO)
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