Remembrance Day
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Interviewer: What does November 11th mean to you?
It means a time when I think of,
the fellows that I knew, what they might
have done with their lives,
what they might have done for our country too.
I started going on, at that, in those days
Armistice Day parades, when I was a
Seaforth Cadet and I would be about 14 then.
So I've been going on them for a good
many years, and I always go on them
and I will continue to go on them
as long as I can. But, it's great to be
with them and to think a bit about
the fellows that you missed.
And it's a good thing that we,
we do remember. It's really, I don't know
how it is in Eastern Canada, but I find
out here in Victoria and Vancouver,
and I don't go over to Vancouver,
but I used to go over there,
more people are coming out today to
the Remembrance Day parades.
Each year there seems to be more
people coming out and it's a real,
real pleasure to see that.
Description
Mr. Sproule reflects on what Remembrance Day means to him.
Frederick Howard Sproule
Mr. Sproule was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, on September 22, 1918. He first served as a cadet with the Seaforth Highlanders before joining the regular service. He switched to the air force as soon as he was able, first being accepted as a gunner, and then into pilot training. After serving as a flight instructor on Harvards, Mr Sproule was shipped to Great Britain where he trained on a Hurricane. Eventually, he piloted a Typhoon as a bomber in the Burma Campaign, helping to drive back the Japanese. His tour finished as the Japanese were completely driven out of Burma.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 01:44
- Person Interviewed:
- Frederick Howard Sproule
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Rank:
- Supernumerary Flight Lieutenant
- Occupation:
- Pilot
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