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Duties of a Communications Gunner

Heroes Remember

Duties of a Communications Gunner

Transcript
I was picked out as a signaller because of the fact that I had been in the boy scouts and I knew the semaphore so that was a start. I was in battery headquarters, I wasn't on the guns as such. I wasn't a gunner to be on a gun. I was on communications and we were in battery headquarters. Interviewer: And what exactly did your job involve doing? Telephone duty, wireless duty, there was a multitude of things I had to do. Yeah. We'd try and keep the telephone lines open, that was our best communication. And little Don 5, just a little handset with two 1.5 dry cell batteries and two terminals, one for ground and one for your main line and you know we could get through 6,7,8 miles on that. And that was strung long was going probably, twenty miles an hour and you had a rod that kept it on the hedges, or on the trees and different things away from the road as you went along and that was it. Yep. Sometimes you'd pick it up before you, if you had a chance, before you moved and sometimes you'd just leave it and go on and use more wire....Yep. Interviewer: So when a battle was raging and your job would be on the phone... Yeah. Give orders from the command post, give orders to the, to the ... shout orders back to the guns. Interviewer: So you would take directions to the phone and how would you get that information to the... Oh more phones, more phones. Every troop had a phone, you know. Yeah. And of course officers all over the place you know, they'd been doing what they had to do too, you know. Sometimes they'd take the phone from you, you know, and they'd give the orders eh, make sure there was no mistakes made or whatever you know, I mean...
Description

Mr. Candow describes his role in the 166th Newfoundland Field Artillery Regiment.

Gordon Henry Candow

Mr Candow was born December 15, 1920, and is the oldest of nine children. Joining in with the lads he was working with when war broke out, he signed into the navy but was quickly transferred to artillery. In May 1940, Mr. Candow sailed overseas as a part of the 57th Heavy Regiment, and was stationed to Norfolk, Great Britain, performing costal defence for a year and a half. After being shipped to Southern England the 57th was soon incorporated into the 166th Newfoundland Field Artillery Regiment. In January 1943, the regiment was shipped to North Africa. They remained in action until the end of the North African campaign, when they were shipped to Italy where the unit saw action in Fogia, Cassino, Ortona, and Boulogne. When the war ended, he returned to Southern England for a short period and then returned home to Newfoundland.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
02:22
Person Interviewed:
Gordon Henry Candow
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Branch:
Army
Units/Ship:
166th Newfoundland Field Regiment
Rank:
Gunner
Occupation:
Signalman

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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