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Description
Mr. Sproule recalls his disappointment in being posted as flight instructor, rather than being posted overseas, and explains why it was necessary.
Transcription
Interviewer: After you got your wings, what did you think was going to happen next and what did happen?
Well we were, as I say it was June, June 22, 1941 and we were hoping that we would go overseas. I didn't know when I got my wings whether I was going to be an NCO or an Officer. I can't remember when I was told I was going to be an instructor. I guess it was before I came home on leave to Vancouver and to report at Trenton, in Ontario, and then some of the fellows went overseas.
Interviewer: When you were told that you were going to be an instructor instead of going overseas, do you remember what your reaction was?
Disappointment. But you see at that time they were building up the Commonwealth Air Training Plan and that was the part that Canada was participating in with the States and, or not with the States, but with England because of the wide open spaces and it was designed to train people in the RCAF, people in the RAF, Royal New Zealand Air Force and the Royal Australian Air Force and we also trained people from Norway. There was an airfield in Ontario called "Little Norway", just Norwegians, they trained them in their own school. So they were building these schools up so fast that you, they had to have the instructors so that's why we were sent down to Trenton.
Well we were, as I say it was June, June 22, 1941 and we were hoping that we would go overseas. I didn't know when I got my wings whether I was going to be an NCO or an Officer. I can't remember when I was told I was going to be an instructor. I guess it was before I came home on leave to Vancouver and to report at Trenton, in Ontario, and then some of the fellows went overseas.
Interviewer: When you were told that you were going to be an instructor instead of going overseas, do you remember what your reaction was?
Disappointment. But you see at that time they were building up the Commonwealth Air Training Plan and that was the part that Canada was participating in with the States and, or not with the States, but with England because of the wide open spaces and it was designed to train people in the RCAF, people in the RAF, Royal New Zealand Air Force and the Royal Australian Air Force and we also trained people from Norway. There was an airfield in Ontario called "Little Norway", just Norwegians, they trained them in their own school. So they were building these schools up so fast that you, they had to have the instructors so that's why we were sent down to Trenton.
Catégories
Flight Instructor in the Commonwealth Air Training Program
Médium
Video
Propriétaire
Veterans Affairs Canada
Guerre ou mission
Second World War
Emplacement géographique
Canada
Personne interviewée
Frederick Howard Sproule
Branche
Air Force
Military Rank
Corporal
Occupation
Pilot
Durée
02:03