- Contributed by听
- Lancshomeguard
- People in story:听
- Brian Joseph Scott, Capt Ferguson Cunninghame, Hullins
- Location of story:听
- Blackpool,Brighton, Gosport, Normandy, Belgium
- Background to story:听
- Army
- Article ID:听
- A4464452
- Contributed on:听
- 15 July 2005
This story was submitted to the People鈥檚 War website by Susan and Terence Sedgwick of the Lancshomeguard on behalf of Brian Joseph Scott and has been added to the website with his permission. Mr Scott fully understands the site鈥檚 terms and conditions.
In 1940 when the war really started I was 13 years old. I joined the ATC at a garage on Bucannan St Blackpool. One meeting night we left the garage at 10pm and at 11pm it was bombed. The bombs were on Seed St and Blackpool North Railway Station.
By 1942 all my friends, who were older than me, had joined the forces, so I joined the army cadets and in 1943 I altered my birth certificate and said I was 17 and a quarter and joined the Grenadier Guards.
I was 12 months in the training for infantry and tank crew, as a gunner/wireless operator on Sherman tanks. In March/April 1944 I joined the Squadron at Brighton as a spare crewman. We completed waterproofing the tanks and the first doodlebugs came over.
My father鈥檚 regiment (4th Loyal Regiment) had been converted to light anti-aircraft and were covering the invasion fleet in the Falmouth area. On the same night that we moved from Brighton to Gosport his regiment moved from Falmouth to Brighton and so our paths crossed in the night without us seeing each other!
We were due to land in Normandy as one of the three armoured divisions, who would hopefully break out once the bridgehead had been achieved but the advance wasn鈥檛 making the progress anticipated due to the bad weather and the nature of the Bocage countryside. So we did not land until 29th June and our first action was Operation Goodwood on 17th-19th July. I went up on 1st August and I joined the tank called
鈥 Leader鈥 which was the lead tank of the Liaison Troop of the 5th Guards Armoured Division and was commanded by Capt Ferguson Cunninghame (known to all as 鈥淭he Boy Wonder鈥).
As we were going along the road, down a hill at the side of a wood we came across a reconnaissance armoured car of the Sherwood Rangers. 鈥淭he Boy Wonder鈥 got out of the tank and spoke to the Rangers officer and came back and told us that they had been fired upon so they had stopped and done what they were supposed to do and reported that there were Germans there. So 鈥淭he Boy Wonder鈥 said that we would fix them so we pulled onto the road, beside the wood to the top of a small hill and he said, 鈥 Can you see them Hullins (the gunner)?鈥滺ullins replied 鈥淣o sir鈥. I said, 鈥淵es I can see them sir鈥. Now, I鈥檇 already loaded the HE (high explosive) so he said, 鈥淩ight, change over.鈥 So I got into the gunner鈥檚 seat and Hullins took my place in the wireless operator鈥檚 seat. I looked through the periscope and the Germans were hurriedly throwing their machine guns and weapons into their truck, so he said 鈥淔ire when ready鈥. So I fired 3 or 4 rounds of the HE and a belt of machine gun ammo (250 rounds). After the 1st shell exploded there was nothing left. They were wiped out, we thought. We couldn鈥檛 check as we were called away. Then we rejoined the squadron. We liberated Brussels on 3rd September 1944.
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