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Description
Lawrence Durant
M. Durant est né à Saint John, Nouveau-Brunswick. Il avait trois frères et neuf sœurs. Son père était colporteur. Il s'enrôle dans l'Armée en mai 1943 et est envoyé sur le front en Italie, où il participe pour la première fois à l'action sur la tête de pont d'Anzio. Il fait partie des troupes qui, par la suite, poussent vers Rome, forçant les Allemands à l'abandonner. Il fait aussi partie un bref moment de la Brigade du diable. Avec le West Nova Scotia Regiment, il sert en France, en Belgique et en Hollande, où il participe à la chute d'Apeldoorn. Il quitte brièvement le service à son retour au pays, mais s'enrôle de nouveau en 1950 et participe à trois missions de maintien de la paix en Allemagne, en Égypte et en Corée. Il a été libéré en 1960.
Transcription
Interviewer: What was your job at the time?
I was a gunner. In the infantry, machine gunner. And that was heavy, I'm telling you, it weighed over thirty pounds I would say plus your ammunition that was on your, all the time on your back.
The Germans gave it to them, they were scared to death of us.
Interviewer: Really?
Yeah.
Interviewer: Now why was that?
I wasn't there. Just after I joined that they took this place by the name of Santa Maria, there are two Santa Maria's in Italy. They took this Santa Maria and they never lost a man. They had a couple wounded but they took every German in that town prisoners and then when they interrogated some of them, one of their officers that's what they named us. They were terrified of us yeah, they didn't know where we were. We'd blacken our face in the doors at night, they couldn't see us. And then we always had a scout with us too, they were good. Some patrols would be a contact patrol eh. And more times there would be a fighting patrol and there was different kinds of patrols. I know one night we left at dark, dusk and we went a long ways because we didn't get back until morning, daybreak. But we were gone a good many hours. But on the way back I guess the Germans had the same idea as we had so we met their patrol head to head. And we took a few prisoners and that was a bad night. But anyway everything worked out good that time. Just I don't know, by the grace of God I guess it did. After only, we took, we came back to a lake by the name of Lake Albano that was just outside of Rome. And then we were there for about a month I guess and the rest and we took amphibious training in rubber boats. We knew there must be something up and there was. We had to make a beach landing in Southern France. I was a beach marker.
Interviewer: Okay. What does a beach marker do?
Well they get into a rubber boat with three other guys and you paddled yourself ashore in the dark and pull up a light and just praying to God that there's no Germans where you land. All your gear and everything you're not supposed to make any noise. Climb down one of those boats on rope ladders on destroyers and rope ladders, that was scary. And I can't swim.