Bad Ankles
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Yeah, because my two brothers were working I think it was that
day, my two brothers were working out on 89 highway here cleaning
brush for the Bell Telephone Company, and the day war was
declared anyway. And they come home and they had both joined the
army that day the war was declared; I think it was September the
9th or something like that 1939. And I remember my mother was
quite upset about it. Dad didn't say anything at all. I thought
they were a pair of nuts. Jealous I guess 'cause I wasn't going
too but I had three years to wait. I had tried to get in when I
was seventeen but they caught me on my age. There was one
friend of mine that got through he looked older than the rest of
us, I was kind of baby faced in those days. And everytime I said
something about joining up my mother darn near went in to
hysterics, actually I had three brothers in there, two and half
brothers, half brother was in too, and she was quite upset about
it like that. Well then I turned nineteen I knew I was either
going to be conscripted or I was going to have to go so. I was up
town here the one day just after Christmas, my dad was a Bell
telephone man here in town, at this town and so on. And he's in
the pool room over there playing a game of pool, that has nothing
to do with the Bell Telephone Company but they used to time
off, and I walked in there and said, "Dad I'm going to join the
army." So he said, "That's fine." So I went in to see the
civilian recruiter officer which is Graham Hasty it was eleven
o'clock in the morning, I was on the train at twelve o'clock
heading for London. Went home, and when I come home mom says,
"You joined the army." I said, "Yes." Well she, when she knew it
was happening she was alright over it. But she had quite a hard
time, too. So that was in between Christmas and the first of the
year I think it was about the third of January I was a soldier.
At least I had a uniform on. I figured there was going to be
somebody telling me what to do whether he knew more than I did
or not, didn't matter he's still the one going to tell me what to
do. Outside my ankles I was fairly good shape at that time and I
figured I'd get along all right. I did have rheumatic fever as a
kid there, kinda messed my ankles up there, and walking I could
walk as far as anybody but marching about a block and I felt like
my ankles were on fire. So when I went to Ipperwash I did,
I fell out of the parade one day on a march and (inaudible) came
back raising the dickens what was wrong with me and I told him I
said I had rheumatic fever when I was a kid and I said my ankles
are bad, I said I can march in short steps and so on, I said it
is starting to feel like somebody turned a blow torches on both
my ankles and I said I stumble. Well he said, "What can we do
about it." I said, "Let me walk my own pace." So another guy was
the same way about the same age he came from London, I think,
he'd had rheumatic fever as a kid. So from then on we'd route
march out there we'd march out with the rest of the fellows and
then we'd set our own pace, keep on walking and then we'd walk
back in with them, so it worked out pretty good. But we had
to set our own pace pretty well and of course when
the fight was on you set your own pace anyway.
Description
Mr. Tomlin discusses his enlistment and a reprieve on the parade square.
Glen Tomlin
Mr. Tomlin was born in Clinton, Ontario, in 1923. His family moved to Harriston when he was very young. Once he was old enough he worked in a box factory earning $7/week for 60 hours of labour. Despite having had rheumatic fever, which made it impossible for him to walk at a marching pace, Mr. Tomlin was accepted by the army, where he trained as a field gunner. He later switched to infantry, joining the Hard Light Infantry, 9th Brigade, 3rd Canadian Division. Mr. Tomlin's service saw him in several combats in Northern Europe, often engaging the enemy at very close quarters. Mr. Tomlin now resides in Palmerston, Ontario.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 3:20
- Person Interviewed:
- Glen Tomlin
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Europe
- Battle/Campaign:
- Battle of the Scheldt
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Highland Light Infantry
- Rank:
- Private
- Occupation:
- Gunner
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