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Soldier:
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Bill Charles |
| Date:
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June
12th , 1944 |
| Location:
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Arromanches,
France - Tilburg, Holland |
| Unit: |
Durham Light Infantry and Cameronian [Scottish Rifles] |
My dad was no-one special
to anyone but his family. He was of the Old School,
he was boss in his house, Ma got a share of his wage if he was working,
but only as much as he chose. She worked wonders with the pittance
he gave her, and she brought up two kids, my sister Jean, and myself,
Jim. He would be in the bar, or later the Club almost
every night, he was a Committee Man, at times a sponger,
at times totally stubborn, would not back down to anyone, and had
an opinion on just about everything. My sister and I were afraid
of him until he died, alone, probably bitter, but reaping, as he
had sown. BUT, He was MY DAD, and when I was a young lad, and asked
What did you do in the War da? he told me. He later
told more tales, some true, some jokey, and some plain daft. This
little attempt at literature is to give him some pride back, he
said he would do it again, with the same lads, said National Service
should never have been withdrawn, [I missed it] and sometimes, when
the pints were flowing, and he was in a good mood, he and some of
his mates would draw me into that special circle, to listen, in
awe, at ordinary men, men I knew only as middle aged and sometimes
grumpy, but then I noticed the blazers they wore. On the breast
pocket was a badge, usually in gold, or silver thread, and there
were many different ones now I noticed, and then a special look
came over their faces, they were back in uniform, remembering, and
by the end of the night, I appreciated them, and Dad a lot more.
Here was a hunting horn
with DLI under it, I knew that, it was the same as Dads badge in
pictures Id seen. There was a Cannon with a pointing barrel,
[RA] one had GR in big letters, [RE?] a WW1 tank? [Tank Corps] but
one I knew was missing, I remember my Ma saying it was the best
looking badge in the Army, it had a star, a wreath, and a hunting
horn, now who was that? No one wore that one in our local club,
but I had seen it but where? Then it hit me, it was in a picture
of Dad in uniform, so questions asked when I was small, were asked
again. This is a way to pass on to my Nephew, and his sons, and
even my son, and his son, a small record of what MY dad did in the
War so for them and to them, I rack my memory for some War
stories of Billy Charles, of Birtley, England, near Newcastle
upon Tyne, An ordinary Soldier.
His War Service began in
August 1939, when his TA unit, DLI, became Embodied
into the Army, the War was just a couple of weeks away, but the
call up was in effect before September 3rd.He had hurried home from
the brickyard where he worked with his father, he was going to take
his girl Jane to Newcastle, to see a new film, as he was washing
up, his mother said someone was coming to the door with a blue envelope.
Dad knew what that was, so he told her to say hed gone out,
and come back tomorrow, But, the messenger told Nana the lads were
meeting in the William a pub in Birtley, After discussing
what was happening with Jane, they decided to go to the pub and
see what was up.
It seems that many a pint
was drank that night, as the lads in uniform were told to report
to the drill hall, now! Being the true soldiers they were, hardly
anyone turned up that night, but next day, with thick heads, dry
mouths, and a following crowd, the unit formed up in the drill hall.
They were tasked with digging holes in the farmers field next
to the hall, dad had a rifle and two bullets, and said If
I fire these, can I go home again as there are no more? He
was on night sentry, and only had a couple of curious dairy cows
snuffling around for company. Next night they were allowed home,
but had to be back the following night to be Moved to
parts unknown. As was related to me by both Mam and Dad, you
could have sailed a ship down Harras Bank that night women
crying, old timers like my Granddad asking to be allowed to go,
as they had been there before, and all the while, drink flowing
from the pub, the landlord was losing a lot of his best customers
that night.
Eventually, the buses,
not trucks, set off, no one knew where to, and hours later they
were in a strange part of England. with no means of letting anybody
know they had arrived safely. At least thats what the officers
and NCOs thought, A bright lad had stuffed a couple of his champion
pigeons in his kit bag, and he sent one home now, they were in Oxfordshire
for Home Defence, and the people in Birtley knew before anyone else.
After some to-ing and fro-ing
as a prisoner escort, back home some nights, but all over the country
with his mate Bob Elliot, Dad was settling into wartime life. He
was trained on the PIAT, and until he died he had a scar over his
eye, where the bugger hit me he swore he could tell
a PIAT man by that scar, and he did a number of times.
All good things come to
an end, some of the Battalion had been sent to France, some would
die, and some escape from Dunkirk, some were captured, to spend
almost six years as prisoner, and some simply disappeared. Dad was
posted to Iceland, he spent Eighteen months there, coming back for
invasion training, late 1942 I believe. He was trained to drive
a Bren Carrier, and loved it. Many years later I took him to the
DLI Museum in Durham, and he literally taught me to drive a carrier,
there in the museum. The guard guy was about to say something until
dad told him he was an ex Durham, and an ex- carrier driver, he
showed me and the guy some places that only those crews knew
I could retell some tales
from his training days, but this is about his Cameronian days, so
well skip to June 1944, not D-Day, but D+ 6, when Billy Charles
invaded France, was told to drive his carrier into that field, park
it that side, then get a cup of tea. Not a bad start? Then hes
told to drive out again, through That gate, and now, by the way,
you are rebadged as Cameronian, NOT Cameron!!!!! and he found himself
in company of fine Scottish Gentlemen. at least thats what
he told me, but Im sure he had something else to say about
that. I asked about the pipes, Fine music, stirs the soul,
but when you see the Scots charging, its not the Germans they
want, its the guy playing those bloody things I
asked about the Kilt, We could wear trews, tartan just the
same, and as easy to start fights and of course Whats
worn under the Kilt?, Absolutely nothing son,- Its all
in first class condition. Oh yes, Dad took to his new regiment
with a great spirit
. and that spirit went with him through
Belgium, Holland and into Germany, to be drunk when it was all over,
but that was a way away just yet.
He landed at ARROMANCHES
about D+ 6, he told me of driving his carrier over the Mulberry
Harbour, how this was a marvel of engineering, but he was glad to
get to firmer ground, he was no great swimmer. The next thing he
told me was of his being Rebadged to the Cameronians, he told me
this occurred either during, or just after the Battle of Caen,the
DLI, and the Cameronians had taken a good hiding, and it was decided
to consolidate, so he and others were told to report into a certain
field, as he said, I was told to drive into this field, told
to wait, have a cup of tea, then report to an Officer. He
told us we were now in the Cameronians, and God help anyone who
said Camerons!, so get your transport and prepare to move.
Im not sure if they
went to Bayeux from here, or what happened, Id love to know
from anyone else who was rebadged. He traveled to Villers Bocage,
it was here he came under fire for the first time, at least it was
here he heard and felt somebody was trying to kill me
He recalled how he was in a field, and a Spandau opened up from
another side, and he could see the trail of tracer and earth as
it was spurting up. He dived to the ground and found great relief
to be behind a blade of grass, as thick as a tree trunk
it was amazing he said, how anything, no matter how small, could
be as big, as to hide behind when the bullets were flying. That
was his Baptism of fire He was scared, feared for his
life, but lived to tell the tale, with a glint in his eye.
Villers Bocage was a fierce
battle. Im sure all who were there do not need reminding of
that fact, I have read the tales of it, and am proud My Dad was
there. As the carrier driver, he became a shell carrier
when his team was ready to start a mortar shoot. He used to laugh
as he retold how when he pulled up somewhere, the regular Infantry
would call him names, and tell him to go elsewhere, because as soon
as theyd fired off a few rounds, the Germans would reply in
kind, by which time S Company was on its way somewhere else, thereby
missing that which we had sown He never spoke much of France,
except to say hed like to see parts of it again, like Bayeux,
hed seen the Tapestry, and while sitting in a shell hole from
WW1, he wondered if he was sitting where his Father had been.
After France was Belgium,
and some fun times, he told of the Union Jack club, in the main
square, next to the railway station. He said he had some good times
in there. He loved Brussels, some things he would not share, like
a certain sergeant who was famous for his dancing that
was all I got on that subject. He also told me how he met up with
a big French Canadian, and they became friends, who bumped into
each other now and again, up until the end of the War. One story
was that he and Frenchy were in a bar in Brussels, when
a Yank started to become aggressive and argumentative
and was about to fight any and all comers, he pulled a flick-knife,
to which Frenchy pulled a hunting knife from his boot, threw it
so it landed on the table, and told the Yank to be quiet. He was,
and DAD was happy Frenchy was his friend.
Again I must say I am not
sure of any timeline to these recollections, I wasnt there,
and Dad didnt elaborate. He would just say something like
One time in Brussels
or something along those
lines. But I can recall how he told his stories, and how he enjoyed
his War. In the heat of battle, some strange tales emerge, he recalled
the time when he and some mates were in a farmyard, they found some
edible eggs, some potatoes, and decided to do some egg and chips,
except they had no fat, so on searching again, found a jar of honey,
decided this would do, and fried the eggs in the honey. He never
said if they did the chips, but he did say the eggs were different
another time, they had real, fresh pork, after spending a lot of
ammunition, and a very long time trying to shoot this pig, It
just would not die, he said.
Driving the Carrier, he
was used to doing the Dixie run to outlying positions,
so the lads could get a hot meal. He told of one time he was taking
a hot box to a sniper lying up in a barn. Dad and his
friends knew this guy, and they all had agreed they could not do
his job. It was a quiet approach to his spot, Dad walking the last
few yards so the enemy not too far ahead would not hear the sound
of the Carrier. He went in the barn, up the stairs, and was watching
the sniper work. A German moved away from his group, to relieve
himself behind a tree, but in view of the sniper, who offered Dad
a look through his scope, Dad saw the German was indeed Havin
a good un and asked the sniper if he was going to shoot him.
The sniper looked through his sight, shook his head and said not
yet. They waited until the German had finished, pulled up his trousers,
fastened his belt, and was starting to walk away. Then the sniper
shot him, clean as a whistle. Dad said why the wait,
the sniper replied, Im not that hard hearted Id
shoot a guy on the toilet. He died happy, with nothing on his mind
Dad swore that this story was true I have to believe it. All was
not fun, and laughs Im sure, but there must have been instances
that broke through the seriousness.
He was driving his Carrier
and he caught an infection in his thumb, it swelled so badly, and
was so full of poison, it was touching the palm of his hand. He
had to go back down the line to an aid post to have it lanced, when
he got back, it was to the Tail end of the Gheel battle.
He was not happy to be sent backwards when his mates were going
forward, but he was ordered to go, as he could not grip because
the thumb was touching the palm of his hand, he told his Officer
he would just burst it by driving, but the officer would have none
of it and sent him back. I believe this officer was killed near
Gheel, when he dived under a carrier to escape shelling, only to
have blast blow under the carrier he was under. Dad said all in
all his Officers werent too bad, Im not sure if one
was a Captain Jurgensen, [he may have been DLI,] but he got on OK
with them.
One day, or it may have been toward dusk, an officer came to Dad
and his pal, another carrier driver, and asked if they would Dash
down the road to that Villa thing, load up with as many wounded
as possible and get them back to the R.A.P., It was also pointed
out that the road was under observation, and any dust brought forth
some Nastiness that we didnt want too near to
us He and his pal, set off, the Officer in Dads carrier, until
they were almost at the gate, Turn Now !!! and the gate
post was demolished, That made it easier for my pal to get
in the drive said Dad. Loading up with stretcher cases first,
and doing a number of runs until it was just too dark to see, the
two carriers did sterling work. Other drivers had not exactly
refused, but
and the Officer told Dad, You Will,
hear more for this nights work Alas, he was killed just
a few days later, so no more was heard. Dad wasnt bothered;
he and his pal were just pleased to help other pals.
Leave came around, but
so did the Battle of the Bulge and hardly had the lads
got their boots off, than they were back to help the Yanks, this
was not a pretty site he recalled, young men hanging from tank guns
by wire, or their dogtags, and yet the one thing that
stuck in his mind, was the fact that there was cake, and soda pop,
and decorated trees. He always said the Yanks were not concentrating
and were caught out because their troops were not as disciplined
as ours. During this period, he and his mates were trying to sleep
in a farmhouse, but just outside was the body of The biggest
bloody Jerry he ever saw, and no-one could sleep just thinking
of this poor man, so in the middle of the night, they had to bury
him, so they could sleep. I asked if they marked the grave, so his
family would be notified, Nope, and that was that.
Eventually, he came into
The land of clogs and windmills [that got past the censor,
so Mother knew where he was heading, and she kept that letter for
years.] Market Garden, the mad dash to a sudden stop, He couldnt
explain why XXX corps, or Second Army, never pressed on, he felt
they should have. Nijmegen, and the flat tops of the Dykes, the
bridges, being told by a Tankie to get that effing mess
tin out of his way, or hed be run over. Then came Tilburg,
I have a picture that says with the first troops to liberate
Tilburg its dated, and I would love to go over there, and
find the house in the picture, and some friends of Dads,
iut may happen.
The War was winding down
now, he was either in Kiel, watching over SS officers in the prison,
Several slipped on occasion, those uneven floors He
met a cousin somewhere in a Prison Camp, who begged him for a loan
of his rifle, as he had a score to settle. He was not overly impressed
with the conditions the Germans had to live in, as they denied ever
knowing about Concentration camps nearby
.so let the buggers
starve He made another trip
home just as the War was ending, in fact the War was over, and by
the time he got back to Newcastle, the news was just breaking there.
When a guard told him the War was over, he smiled and said I know
.
Leave over, War over, but he had to go back to Kiel, the picture
there is dated June 45. He met a friend of his being de-mobbed,
and they drank that spirit he had carried since landing. Swaps were
made, another town was driven into, a manicure set was thrown at
him, incomplete, but I have it still. Werewolves as they called
the German Underground were still active, and he was
in on the hunt. One night, on returning to barracks, one of the
new boys was playing cowboy with his pistol, a chip flew up and
hit Dad over the eye, so now he had two scars, one from a PIAT,
and one from after the war
Now it was time to clean
off the Carrier and park it for the last time, check the oil, redo
the tracks, grease it, wash it, and say bye bye to a friend, who
had saved me walking all that way He missed that Carrier,
and many years later in the DLI Museum in Durham, he showed me how
to drive it. Id love a real go at one, Im sure he was
a good teacher that way. When the Surrender was signed, I believe
he was on the banks of the Escaut Canal, when I asked how he felt,
I was told this, I felt relief, a sadness at friends lost,
I felt I needed to thank God I was in one piece, I kneeled and prayed,
then we laughed, had a drink, and were very very careful, we wanted
to be sure the guys on the other side knew it was finished too.
There was also a sense of something ending, I would be going home
to Birtley, the lads would be splitting up and going their own ways.
Reunions were talked of, but I never went to any, except one of
the DLI where I was told I could pick the best carrier they had,
then I found out that it was a recruiting drive, not a reunion.
Ilost touch with the lads I served with, but if I could go back,
would I? You bet I would, we had some good times, and I had some
great pals.
After his de-mob, he gave
a load of his souvenirs to a relative, who in turn sold them, all
that was left was a very small selection of pictures, my Grandmother
wanted only his Cameronian Cap Badge, she got it, but on her passing,
it was lost When I was old enough to ask about his war,
he related these tales here, but in his style, eyes twinkling, a
memory stirring, a thought of someone, somewhere I never would know,
something he would not tell me about just yet, but that tale went
untold, it had to do with a sergeant, and his talent
it involved dancing too I never did get that one.
As I said, I loved to hear
the guys in the Club telling their stories, Tankies, Sloggers, Drivers,
each a joy to my ears, I wish I could have written them all down,
or recorded them. Time is passing, I hope someone reads this and
recalls my Dad, but also I hope he recalls some of his own stories,
and someone writes them down for him. Its a legacy to be proud
of, we need to have the Ordinary side heard, not the
Medal winning Hero, though that has its place, but the guy
who, all he got was two Stars, and two round ones, as Dad called
his medals, alas I stand guilty of playing with them and losing
them. So in ending, I thank all who served, I hope I hope I can
meet some of you sometime, and listen to your stories.
The last word of course
is Dads, when he was talking to his best mate from before
the War, in the bar sometime after it was all over, Colin,
you flew in Lancs, and bombed Kiel didnt you? Yes
was Colins reply, why? What were you aiming
at? The harbour he was told, again, why? cos
you hit every bloody thing but
. Goodnight DAD, sleep
well, and I promise Ill find that someone in Tilburg and well
meet, sometime. God Bless..
Bill Charles' son, Jim Charles
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Personal Photographs

Durham Light Infantry Badge

Cap Badge of Cameronians
(Scottish Rifles)

Dad [Bill Charles] 2nd from left, front row
in Iceland, 11th BATTN, DLI.

Flak Battery believed near Wiesmar,
with the Cameronians.(Bill Charles left front.)

BELIEVED TO BE RIECHSWALD FOREST 1945 Bill Charles
front row, 2nd from right

At the end of the War, Carriers had to be serviced
and cleaned, Germany 1945-46,

This is marked "With the first troops to
liberate Tilburg Holland, October 44" Bill Charles (driver)
bareheaded in front of carrier.After several attempts, cannot identify
which part of Tilburg this is, if anyone recognises the area, or
the family in the picture, please contact me.
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