- Contributed by听
- Lancshomeguard
- People in story:听
- John Pye
- Location of story:听
- Lancaster
- Background to story:听
- Civilian
- Article ID:听
- A5322818
- Contributed on:听
- 25 August 2005
This story has been submitted to the People's War website by Sharon Lambert of the Lancshomeguard on behalf of John Pye and added to the site with his permission.
I left school just before my 14th birthday and I started work at Williamson鈥檚 factory at Lune Mills Lancaster and then I went to work for a biscuit firm, McVitie and Price鈥檚. They used to have a garage, where they鈥檝e built the new flats on the Quay, and they used to deliver the skips of biscuits to the station and we used to have to unload them, sort them out, and deliver them round Cumbria, the Fylde, all over the place. I got to know the Lake District doing that. I worked at the Grammar School after that, as a lab assistant and caretaker, till I got called up in 1943.
I was a signalman in the Royal Navy. I was on the D Day landings and then I went across France, Belgium and Holland. A priest came aboard our ship and he was saying Mass and I started answering. He said 鈥淲e鈥檝e got an altar boy somewhere.鈥 So I became his altar boy through France, Germany and Holland and every time he came I served Mass for him. The chaplain was Father Holland, who later became Bishop of Salford.
I went out to Malta in 1946 on HMS Indomitable. During the war, when I was delivering biscuits, we used to go to Barrow Dockyard and there was two ships being built 鈥 Indomitable and Indefatigable 鈥 and I said I鈥檇 love to go on one of them. My boss said 鈥淛ohn, the war will be over and finished before you get called up.鈥 But that鈥檚 the ship I went out on to Malta - Indomitable.
After I was demobbed, I came back and worked at Storey鈥檚 for 38 years till I was made redundant. Then I worked at the Moor Hospital for about six years till I retired.
漏 Copyright of content contributed to this Archive rests with the author. Find out how you can use this.