THE LIFE OF A P.B.I. MAN - WORLD WAR II
Pte 6401304 S.H. (Syd) Seal T.D.,
4th Btn. The Royal
So much has been written about the
war by Brigadiers and Generals, that it is sometimes forgotten that it is the
infantry, in the past, that has had ultimately to win
all the battles and wars. The Infantryman not only takes the active part of
fighting, but, when he is finished, he then has nothing better to sleep on than
a muddy slit trench, returning on guard for half of the night, and, when not
patrolling, he stands for hours at dawn each day awaiting an attack, which
rarely came.
His burden is not only the tedious
job of patrolling, but the constant mental strain of waiting for the attack. He
is faced with danger every moment of every day, and the thought of death lurks
in the back of his mind. He sees he comrades being
eliminated one by one, and sees no release from the constant torment until his
regiment is withdrawn from the forward area, therefore, there is an immeasurable
gap between the infantrymen in battle and all the other soldiers. The
infantryman is proud of his regiment, and of being in the infantry. I was one
of those men, and this is a short story of my life between the years of 1939 -
1945, The Second World War.
I joined the Royal Sussex Regt.
Territorial Army, August 1937, 17 years of age. Our head quarters
was in a tin hut in Morton road,
May 31st, myself
and seven other men decided to row out into the channel, we were picked up by a
British fishing boat who were sweeping for mines, they took us to Ramsgate. At
this point only half of the 4th Battalion returned, the ones who hadn’t
returned were either taken prisoner or were killed. I was one of the lucky ones
as I only had a small wound on my face and on my right hand, from a piece of
shrapnel.
The Battalion were reformed with new
men and we returned to the south coast to defend our country. In May 1942 we
sailed in a large convoy aboard a ship called The John McAndrew, an ex-meat
ship. A person on board said don’t worry the enemy can’t sink this ship, we
soon found out why, we were never in the water long enough, one minute we were
looking down the funnel of the ship alongside us and the next minute we were
looking at her bottom at the same time she was rolling from side to side. There
were fourteen hundred men aboard and so we were incredibly cramped. We sailed
for the south
The men were ordered to “dig in”,
the ground was rock hard therefore the anti-tank guns were above ground, only
three 6 pounder anti-tank guns were able to find their way forward, I was on
one of them. When daylight arrived we found ourselves surrounded by German
tanks. We fired about six shots and were hit four times by the German guns.
Three of the men were killed and two were wounded, I was hit in the back and
knocked out for a short time, when I came to someone was standing over me, he
said that the War was over, I said “Thank God” then I realised he was a German
with a gun - I was a prisoner of war. All three of the six pounders were picked
off in the first half an hour by the German tank gunners,
we lost a lot of good men in that battle. The 4th Battalion was never reformed
again. One famous soldier of the dessert army wrote “I witnessed this battle at
I was reported missing. My mother
received a card from the
Hospital in
I was taken to a hospital in
From the hospital we, the prisoner
of war, were sent to a P.O.W camp in the north of
IN A PRISIONER OF WAR CAMP
It was still dark when the armed
German stampeded through the hut shouting “Rouse - Rouse” (Hurry - Hurry). You learnt
to move incredibly fast out of your bunk otherwise you soon get a prick of a
bayonet or a German jackboot in your ribs. This ritual of being hurried out of
the hut in the freezing cold for early morning roll-call became a way of life
for someone in this prisoner of war camp. The German who carried out this
roll-call were nick named Goons. These Goons counted, recounted and then
rechecked again, sometimes roll- call would last for hours, once we were
finally dismissed all the men would totter back to their hut, sick to death
with the cold, looking forward to the only privilege allowed in the camp, a
ration of mint tea or acorn coffee. Four men would bring in a dustbin full of
this liquid into the hut which would provide each man with one tin measure (a
measure would be about the size of an army tin mug). It was a very odd mixture
of what we think to be made out of chopped twig leaves, flavoured with mint, no
milk or sugar! We existed on a ration of just two cups daily. Our food
consisted of 350 grams of black potato bread and a litre of a watery muck they
called cabbage or mangled soup. At the weekends the Germans gave us a piece of
fish cheese, this fish cheese was coated with a thick white slime that tasted
vile. Another type of food that was rationed to us was turnip or mangle jam,
only one spoonful, and a piece of wurst, made of raw meat. The size of this
wurst and cheese was about the size of an oxo cube, this wurst had to heated
before eating, camp doctors orders, as it was infested with tape worm germs.
After an air raid we would have larger pieces of meat, you may think what you
like but it was good to eat.
We slept in wooden four tier bunks
on straw stacks which were full of lice so you could never sleep exceptionally
well. There were sixty men in the hut in which I was staying,
therefore there was just enough room in the centre of the hut so that you could
walk around, if you didn’t mind steeping over the men who were brewing a cup of
red-cross tea. The red-cross parcels we received saved many peoples lives in
the camps; if the Germans were in a good mood we might get one parcel a week
between two men rather than between four. Of course if they felt like it all
the parcels were cancelled which did happen quite regularly after air raids.
The raids became worse towards the end of 1944 and still worse into 1945. The
Yanks by day, the R.A.F by night and occasionally the Russians dropped as well.
As my camp was just outside the Herman Goring Works, where the Germans were
extracting oil from coal, this made us a prime target for bombers.
When I was released by the Russians
on
We never took our clothes off to
sleep or wash properly in the last few months of the war. As soon as the siren
sounded we rushed out of the camp and down the drift mine. Sometimes
to stop there until roll call (appel) next morning. Our working week was
Monday to Saturday
Back at the camp another search by
the Goons to see if we had pinched anything from the days work in the factory
but you could always fool the Hun. Then back to your hut for your main meal of
the day; 300grams of potato bread; a litre of cabbage or turnip soup, and a tin
of acorn coffee or mint tea. Then to bed too tired and weak to even bother to
wash properly knowing that in a very short time the R.A.F would be back to
knock a few more buildings down and make a few more holes to fill in.
To combat the lice the Germans
shaved all the hair of our bodies - hair, arm, crutch
and sprayed on a very vile smelling disinfectant, but the lice always won. They
got in the seams of your clothes and in your one small blanket to lay their
eggs. You had to go round the seams with a piece of lighted paper or wood until
you could hear them crack. Just think, 60 men sitting
on their bunks cracking lice eggs. It was like November 5th. The Germans use to
say that the French worked, the Russians did little work, but that the British
made work. How right they were.
One little
incident with a bomb hole. There was one guard who hated the British,
he said we had bombed his home town of
Another sabotage job we managed to
engineer was with the little train that brought the waste from the coal. It was
like thick black sludge and after a short time it set hard. We had to tip the
trucks and the sludge would run down the embankment and then we levelled it
down. After a time we had to move the railway over so it was nearer the edge.
We had to put long poles under the railway line and when the German guard gave
the word every man gave a shove on the pole and the line moved over a few feet.
One morning the train with all the loaded trucks came along the line and
stopped near us P.O.W.s of all nationalities. Someone shouted the right word
and the poles were under the line in a flash. Every man put his weight on the
poles and over went the line, the engine and the trucks full of sludge down the
embankment. This was about two weeks before the end of the war and they never
got them up again.
The next day we had all new guards,
apart from Black Jack who stayed. The day we were released we found him dead
outside the camp hanging from a lamp-post. We think it was the Russians but
were never sure. By now the Germans were beginning to think they had lost the
war, as we could hear and see the flash of the Russians guns in the distance.
They were getting nearer every day.
Having been released we were with
the Russian Women’s Infantry and Russian men, for a week. They told us to sit
down and rest whilst they went to the next town. There was a lot of gun firing
and on return they brought us food and wine which they had pinched from the
Germans. This went on for a whole week. We slept in empty houses or shops taken
over by the Russians, until they handed us over to the Americans. We had to
take all our clothes off and put them on a big fire. We were then de-loused and
given a bath in hot water! The first for a very long time.
We were given American uniforms and a hot meal with real white bread and good
coffee. The following day we were put on a plane (Dakota) and sent to
After surviving the lice and bugs,
being starved, bombed, kicked, hit with a rifle butt or stabbed with a bayonet,
we could still sing and laugh. These men were tough. I looked around the plane
- have you ever seen twenty men crying? There were tears in every
mans eyes including my own. To see those white cliffs
again for the second time in the war. Fifty years on the memory is still
there. Lice—bugs-bombs-Hun-wet-cold-starved. But thank
God I am still alive to tell the world.
PEACE -