Becoming an Intelligence Officer
Heroes Remember
Transcript
I went straight over seas to the battalion at Carter barracks in
Beaufort. Yes D-Day had happened but I was on the boat when
D-Day. Right of, of course they really jumped on us because
there was a training battalion and the parachute battalion, you
see and they expected us to have more casualties then we actually
did I guess, because the training battalion had about two men for
everybody in the battalion. So the object when you got to
England was to get into the battalion. At one point, I was
offered my three hooks back, but I would have had to stay in the
training battalion, never would have gotten across. But that's,
I remember the first time we went through an assault course, a
very good friend of mine, a guy named Pearson. We got to the
top of this hill and collapsed and the two of us looked at each
other and I said, "This can't go on, Pearson." And he said,
"No, I got a friend who is an intelligence sergeant, we'll
try to get into the intelligence section." And he did, he got us
into the "I" section of the battalion and the guys are all dead.
Natural causes, we only had one or two killed during the war.
But it was a good spot to be and we made maps and we made the
briefing maps for the Rhine drop and ah... I made, I made the,
Pearson and I made the big battalion briefing maps for the
Rhine drop. I made two mistakes, I thought it was two
buildings and there was just two plots of land but other than
that it was just exactly as it was when we hit the ground.
They had photos taken four days before, low altitude photos and
then there was the map of course and then there was the high air
photos and then some air craft went in across the dropping zone,
four days was the date on the photos that we got. We had, we
were confined, of course confined to barracks while we were
making these maps but Nickland, Colonel Nickland, he was a, he
was a Winnipeg Blue Bomber, big, big football hero, between the
war, yeah, and he let us, he let us out. All the other ‘I'
sections were closely confined while they were working on their
maps but he let us go out at night.
Description
Mr. Kelly recalls the difficulties in training and his friendship with Mr. Pearson that led him to another career in the army as an Intelligence Officer.
Jeff Kelly
Mr. Kelly was born in Lindsay, Ontario, December 16, 1923. His father was a medical officer with a field ambulance in the First World War and received a Distinguished Service Order. Mr Kelly wanted to be an infantry man as his father had a great admiration for them. He joined the army on the 22nd of May in 1942. He served overseas with the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion which was part of the British 6th Airborne Division.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:30
- Person Interviewed:
- Jeff Kelly
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Canada
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