|
Obviously one of the containers held a ‘split’ casing
Clifford E. Murch - Some of my experiences in wartime
Holland. . . . .
After enlisting in the Canadian Army on December 13, 1942, I
completed basic training in Camrose, Alberta, and then went
on to Armoured Corps training at Camp Borden, Ontario. In
November of 1943 we left Pier 21 at Halifax and sailed
aboard the Mauratania to Liverpool, England. After further
training sessions, I was posted to the British Columbia
Regiment of the 4th Canadian Armoured Division. Our
Division joined the invasion force at Courseilles, France,
on July 26, 1944, and moved on to the battle area south of
Caen. We were now part of Operation Totalize, the big drive
to close the Falaise Gap and trap a large portion of the
German army. In our first engagement with the enemy, our
regiment suffered the loss of many men and 46 tanks. By
August 12th the regiment had rebuilt and we continued our
role in pursuit of the Germans along the coast which led us
to Holland. The First Canadian Army had been assigned the
task of clearing the area of the Scheldt, as a prelude to
opening the post of Antwerp. I was with the British
Columbia Armoured Regiment through the battle of Normandy
and along the coast of Holland. We arrived in the Bergen op
Zoom area on October 29, and I must say I was not impressed
with the area. Much land had been flooded and it was cold
and raining; we spent very little time in dry clothes. Some
of our tanks engaged enemy forces cross the estuary at the
Island of Shouwen and were successful in sinking three
German corvettes. A bell from one of the ships is now in
our Regimental Museum in Vancouver. At about this time we
experienced for the first time the German weapon ‘V2’ which
landed at Brigade headquarters. I remember some nice
weather in early November when our Regiment was together
near Bergen op Zoom for the first time since we left France.
From here, in the later part of November, we moved to
s’Hertogenbosch where we spent a few days while the Second
Armoured Brigade moved through us. It was here
that we had a chance to really meet some Dutch people and my
first impression of Holland and its people, changed. We were
assigned a sector south of the Maas River and it was here we
would spend most of that winter. On Christmas Eve we
were warned of a pending German Paratroop attack, but it did
not materialize. Most of December was given over to
training, maintenance and organization. Our troop (4
tanks) had just finished a training exercise and was sitting
around a campfire, burning the containers our shells came
in. I had just gone to our tank and taken a picture of
the group, when the fire exploded, killing three men and
injuring nine. Obviously one of the containers held a
‘split’ casing, which means the explosive had become
separated from the shell casing, |
|
Clifford E. Murch - WWII Veteran
Posted to the British Columbia Regiment
of the 4th Canadian Armoured Division.
Liberator of the Netherlands
and his brother
Hewitt J. Murch - WWII Veteran
Royal Canadian Signal Corps
2nd Armoured Brigade
Liberator of the Netherlands
|
or a previous round had bedded itself in the ground.
We had been billeted in this area for a while and used to
play snowball, etc., with the children. They were very
quiet when told what had happened.
There is an island in the Maas called Kapelsche Veer, which
was heavily fortified by the Germans, and the 4th Division
(ours) was assigned the task of clearing it. The British
Columbia Regiment served as artillery for the Lincoln and
Welland Regiment, who suffered many casualties in this
battle. On February 24, 1945, we were ordered to move to
Kleve to take part in the Battle of the Hochwald Forest as
part of Operation Veritable to clear the area west of the
Rhine. I was injured in this battle on March 1 |
|
and flown to the Canadian Hospital in Brugge, Belgium. When I
recovered from this injury, the war was over, and I joined
the rest of our Regiment in the area of Hengelo, Holland,
where we enjoyed the hospitality of many Dutch Families. In
1995 we were privileged to participate in a program ‘Welcome
Canada’ in which families in Holland chose to host veterans
from Canada on the 50th anniversary of the end of the war.
We continue to keep in touch with the family that hosted us
and they have visited with us here in Canada several times.
Clifford E. Murch,
Lancer, Sask. April 4, 2005 |