- Contributed by听
- 大象传媒 Open Centre, Hull
- People in story:听
- Roy Malcolm Eastwood
- Location of story:听
- India/Burma
- Background to story:听
- Army
- Article ID:听
- A4293588
- Contributed on:听
- 28 June 2005
My Lost Birthday
Edited and Typed by Louise Collier
Having recovered from bombing injuries when Hull was blitzed on the 7th and 8th of May 1941, I persuaded the Recruiting Sergeant that despite a disabled right elbow, I was fit for the Army and was accepted for the Royal Corps of Signals as a Wireless Operator. Having passed out at Catterick, I was posted to the 52 Mountain Division and trained in Scotland, for what was presumed to be an attack on Norway. However I then retrained as an Electrician in the Royal Signals and ended up in India on my way to Burma.
The train journey from Bombay to Dibrugarh in North East India, took about 14 days鈥 included crossing the Brahmaputra River by ferry and then onto a narrow gauge railway to Kohima (scene of the notorious defence to prevent the Japanese from entering India)
During the longest rail journey of my life, which was from the 8th to the 22nd of December 1944, we had to make unauthorized stops for toilet, washing and eating purposes. Apparently there were long intervals between trains, so a delay didn鈥檛 seem to bother anybody. During the stops we would take our empty jam tins up to the steam engine hauling the train, with our loose tea in the tin and the driver would inject boiling water into our jam tins to 鈥渕ash up鈥 for us. Food would be followed by a wash, we always stopped nearby an unoccupied river. This was followed by impromptu football matches鈥 for exercise. During one of these 鈥渂reaks,鈥 I announced that it was my 21st Birthday and I had kept a tin of peaches back to celebrate. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 unlucky,鈥 someone said, 鈥渂eing 21 on the 13th.鈥 鈥淣o, I鈥檓 21 on the 12th of December,鈥 I said. 鈥淥h well, that was yesterday!鈥 I was told, so I missed my 21st Birthday.
My service with the Northern Combat Command under General (鈥淰inegar Joe,鈥) took us into Burma and included the capture of Mandalay. However, I contracted Amoebic Dysentery and was flown out to hospital and subsequently repatriated to England, in December of 1946. The discovery that I鈥檇 served with a disability helped me to avoid an occupation force to Japan and I returned to civilian life in February, 1947.
漏 Copyright of content contributed to this Archive rests with the author. Find out how you can use this.