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15 October 2014
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Liberated from Laufen and return to Guernsey

by Guernseymuseum

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Archive List > Family Life

Contributed by听
Guernseymuseum
People in story:听
Jack Ross, Mrs Ross, John Ross. Ambrose Sherwill, Bill Arnold, Frank Stroobant, Dorothy Hurrell, Norman Langlois
Location of story:听
Laufen. Gloucester. Guernsey
Background to story:听
Civilian
Article ID:听
A6342752
Contributed on:听
24 October 2005

Video recording of Jack Ross interviewed by John Gaisford made on 12/3/2005
Edited transcript by J David 23/9/05

VE day or thereabouts I was in Germany, still in the camp, the Americans were in the camp with us, the American liberating army or battalion, or whatever it was, and we weren鈥檛 actually flown back for quite a time. My first trip back in a plane, the pilot apologised 鈥 it was a DC鈥ne of the old Dakota things, a DC3, and it touched down, and took off again straight away. He said I鈥檝e never done that before, and of course I had a chap there, all in a line down the side of the aircraft, looking down, coming over the White Cliffs of Dover, and I said 鈥淥h, George鈥 鈥 he was as nervous as anything 鈥 鈥淭here鈥檚 the White Cliffs down there, George鈥 鈥淥h, Oh, Oh, I don鈥檛 want to see that鈥 Poor fellow, I don鈥檛 know what happened to him. And then I got back, I think we landed at either Stanstead 鈥 would it have been Stanstead? There were so many all around there, you know. My friend, who had been all through the Occupation, he told me that my wife had died a few days before we were liberated, because we were liberated May 3rd, and waiting then for our dear 鈥 listened to Churchill 鈥 鈥淥ur dear Channel islands鈥︹ you know. Quite a thing.

You couldn鈥檛 come straight back to Guernsey If you were important enough, Sherwill came back fairly quickly, well, he was important, He was going to be the new Bailiff wasn鈥檛 he. He was a nice chap, you know, very nice man, real gentleman. I mean, I knew him as Ambi, and he knew me as Jack, and the first time I met him after was in Le Riches鈥 tobacco department, I was doing tobacco and he had gone in to get his packet of fags, I suppose, and he saw me from the other end of the shop 鈥 鈥淛ack!鈥 鈥 I wasn鈥檛 going to force myself on him, he might not want to talk to riff-raff like me, but he wasn鈥檛 that type of man anyway, he was like old Bill Arnold, did you know Bill Arnold, wonderful man, he was a lawyer, of course, He passed me once in Smith Street, his head was in the clouds there, he was thinking about something or other, because he wouldn鈥檛 have done that, wouldn鈥檛 have cut me, definitely not, so I didn鈥檛 take any notice of it, other people I might have done, called them jumped-up something-or-others. But Sherwill, he was a gentleman. A good camp senior, too. Then Frank Stroobant took over 鈥 or was it the other way round. No, Frank first, then Ambi came, because he had been in the First World War, and probably in the RGM, the Royal Guernsey Militia, or something like that, quite a few of them.
I was still in England when the Japanese business finished. I think that was August. I don鈥檛 know when I got back to England from Germany, I can鈥檛 time it from that. I met my wife there, in Gloucester, she had a dreadful posting to RAF Records, she was a sergeant, and she stopped me, 鈥淎ren鈥檛 you from Guernsey鈥 sort of thing, 鈥淎nd how鈥檚 Vera鈥 鈥 that was my first wife 鈥 my little boy John was with me 鈥 he wouldn鈥檛 let me out of his sight, you know. Then I proposed to her, the second time I took her out, and we were married for fifty-seven years, she died two months ago, I nursed her for the last eight years, she was wonderful. I had noticed her the first day I came to Guernsey, overtook her going up Mount Durand, she was about fifteen, a bit younger than me, I was twenty-one when I came, I thought how skinny she was, I was walking up there with Norman Langlois who was married to Dorothy Hurrell, you know, I think they were cousins, anyway, and I said 鈥 an awfully attractive girl, but she is not going to make old bones鈥. She was eighty-four when she died. I was wrong, happily. She was in the High Street on her first leave, obviously she was looking for me, but it was a real romance, really, because as I say we got married just like that, went to Sark for our honeymoon, got stranded there for a few weeks, a few days rather, I was hoping it would be weeks.

jack Ross

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These messages were added to this story by site members between June 2003 and January 2006. It is no longer possible to leave messages here. Find out more about the site contributors.

Message 1 - Return to Guernsey

Posted on: 24 October 2005 by Audrey Lewis - WW2 Site Helper

Dear Jack Ross,
I was pleased to read your story and romance. What a story - I must read all of it. What a time you had?
I wonder if you knew the Foss family? They too were taken to Germany during the war. Dulcie Foss was at the Deaconess College at Ilkley with me in 1949-50. I listened to her stories about the occupation and wished I had written them down. You have reminded me of her.(Her father was a Methodist Minister on the island)
Dulcie died some years ago.
Thank you for sharing your story with us.
Kindest regards,
Audrey Lewis

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