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Going overseas

Heroes Remember

Well after I graduated or, or finished my training, I expected to stay at this depot, but instead I got transferred to Rockcliff, the airbase at Rockcliff, which is still in Ottawa, of course. Into barracks, back into the real air force life again, and I reported in there. There was no instrument section as such, because as I said, the air frame people did all the instrument work. So I was assigned to the workshops, and again, good training because I learned a bit of machining and everything that went with it. They, they just hadn't really accepted the instrument mechanic as a required trade in the air force. It was developed, you know, with the squadrons that were, were going overseas. It was an instrument section and a requirement to maintain the instruments and take them out and replace them whenever, so on. And that's when it first started to evolve - the instrument trade, was a real ground trade that required some attention. I stayed there about, I got transferred there, I think was in about April, or March. Just prior to going to it, I had a supplementary course on the Sperry auto pilot, which was an indication that I had done well on my instrument training course. They had selected me for this one week training program on the Sperry auto pilot, which was quite a feather in my cap, I think and it gave me a lot more, sort of confidence in the trade. But as I said when I got to Rockcliff, there wasn't an instrument section, there wasn't a requirement so, I just spent my time in the workshops. I got there, I think it was March. But only stayed, I was only there three, three months, quite reasonably happy, but on May the 10th, I still remember the day I was called in to the orderly room, and he said, "AC-1 Snell, you're transferred overseas." And I said, you know, the usual question is, "When?" They said, "Well, ten days time, in the meantime you're CB'd," which is confined to barracks. I had no opportunity to go home on leave. I had been home on leave right after my course in Calgary in January, but I had no opportunity to go home as they had, later had any leave. And for the next ten days it was being equipped with uniforms and kit to go overseas. And things moved very, very quickly, ten days went by. I was, went over from Rockcliff, with a unit to supplement the group of people that were supplementing the squadron that was already over there, 110 squadron had already gone over, about February they went over. But they were short of people, different trades, and there were about fifty of us in this group, that were going to join 110 squadron, which was the first squadron that went overseas.

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