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Description
Mr. Colcomb describes receiving gunnery instruction and boiler theory, but no practical instruction, before qualifying for engine room duty.
Transcription
And immediately I went to the Merchant Navy, went down to Place [Phisia] in Montreal Manning Pool and joined, signed all the necessary papers, got a letter from Ottawa. I just forget the person’s name, but he was in charge of merchant seamen, to report to Prescott Marine Engineering School. So I was up there for approximately, I think it was six weeks and the food was great. It was a great camaraderie, but as far as the actual training it was very little. You sat in a classroom and all you did was really read notes about engine room procedures and pumps and boilers and after that was over with we went to Montreal, back to Place [Phisia] Manning Depot and they gave us a little course on gunnery and as part of that program they sent us to, for about two or three days, I’m not exactly too sure, to Saint Zotique which is up near Valley field on the St. Lawrence, just west of Montreal for actual gunnery practice on Oerlikons and Bofors. And we were firing at a drogue towed by a plane and then from then, that was the end of it, we were given a certificate of accomplishment and then it was back to manning depot, rather, yes the depot, manning depot waiting for a ship.