Interviewer: Mr Forsyth, on the, at the,
on the day that the Japanese attacked,
do you recall the circumstances,
do you recall your reaction when you
learned that Japan was attacking the colony?
Well, I think it was one of absolute horror,
because we, there was only three planes for
the protection of that colony and they were,
all three were shot down the first day.
When you, when you see that happen,
when you see that happen and
you realize that, that you're out numbered,
vastly out numbered in the air,
then you wonder what it's going to be
like on the ground, oh dear.
Interviewer: Do you recall the impact that
it had on you when the Japanese overran
the mainland part of the colony,
and forced the forces back onto the island?
What was your reaction when you realized
that the Japanese were attacking in that
number and were that successful?
Well it was, let's face it, it was,
it was ghastly. It was ghastly.
We were short of, we were so short of
ammunition and then when our, at
Jardine's Lookout, when we were out of
ammunition and Lieutenant Brickette said,
"You've got to use your, your hand grenades,"
and we pulled the pins and threw them and
nothing happened, and he grabbed one and
he took it apart and there's no detonators
in the hand grenades.
We might as well be throwing rocks.
It, it, it, a terrible feeling of utter futility,
out of ammunition and then no detonators
in the hand grenades.
We spent, the squad I was with,
or the platoon I was with,
we spent one night piling up sand bags
around a shelter for our officers,
and in doing that, some of our work
gang were actually wounded by shrapnel
from artillery from the far, from the mainland,
from the mainland.
That was, that was, that was horrible to think that,
that we could spend the night piling up
sand bags and, and have this,
this shrapnel showering down.
It was a, it was a bitter, bitter experience.
A bitter experience.
Interviewer: The Japanese were shelling the
positions on the island.
Did you men have artillery of your own?
We, we personally had no artillery.
There was big guns at Stanley and the, the,
the best information we got about those big guns
was the governor of the island said,
"We mustn't use those, we'll just, we'll simply
antagonize the Japs if we use those."
We could look across, we could see their,
their trucks, huge trucks coming, streams,
convoys, truck, after truck, after,
they were a perfect target for the
guns of Stanley, a perfect target.
And when we asked,
"Why on earth aren't, aren't, aren't there,
this, this, these big guns,
why aren't they being used?"
"Oh, the governor of the island said we
might make the Japs angry if
we use big guns on them."