![]() |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I operate a Museum for the Queens Own Rifles. In the Museum I have at least seven original sets of Battledress from WW2. The nicest one was invasion worn and given to me by the guy who wore it. On June 8th he was
winged in the head and sent back to England to recover. Two weeks later when he was at his "girlfriends" the Provost (he got daily passes) picked him up and delivered him to base to return to his Unit. He was in civvies, was outfitted at base and RTU'd. He survived the war and picked up his Kit on the way home. It was hanging in the basement in the original bag, with helmet, when he gave it to me. Five years ago I picked up a Kit from a Sgt. MM winner. I wanted his MM but got two sets of Battledress. One he returned home in. It had the red lanyard, rank machine stitched on and about a dozen pleats on the back. A new Cdn made uniform. The other was a well worn, pants and tunic, that he wore on the invasion and through the war. I also have the CO's tunic, trousers and web (camo'd with dark capo yet) (Col. Steve Lett). The rest of the uniforms are WW2 but not invasion. If you take the time to check out paybooks and message books you will find that the sgts and section commanders made a list of weapons issued to their troops. They dont have Canadian serial numbers. Although later in the war Canadian Long Branch Numbers start turning up. I deal with fact. Not Part 2 orders. Or coffee table books. In the defence of history when I say Third Div. I refer to the invading troops. Not support troops or Att's and det's that came in later or on day 2. More on the actual vehicles later Simundson |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Now we have the full story, I wish you had provided those details earlier as you had me believing that you had some mythical BD uniform tht had travelled all through NW Europe.
The well-worn BD in the kit bag is interesting, but how do you know it was field used? It is nice that you represent the QOR Museum, but to be frank, museums are some of the biggest offenders for glossing over the details, especially when it comes to material history. I asked you about your original earlier post, "Not only that the third Division had new weapons, Uniforms and web. The helmets were the Mk 3 style , the web was Brit. web with web "D"'s, and the uniforms were Canadian style British made. With the exception of the Brens the weapons were new Brit made stens and Enfields." Specifically if you had any primary source material to back up the statement or is this just a theory of yours? I am glad you deal in more than just Part II Orders and coffee table books, so I will press you again to see if you have any primary source data to back up your statment? Nothing would impress me more if you could provide the QOR QM returns for Mk III Helmets or a written order from the QOR CO directing everyone in the regiment to draw new BD prior to the invasion. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bill Gregg's book was based on this Canadian WWII Vehicle Data Book.
![]() ![]() |
#4
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
I was wondering if the pictures were taken for a visual list of vehicles to build for the invasion but I read the introduction of Bill's book and he writes that Canadian army photographers went to various camps a few months prior to D-Day and took the pictures so I guess that answered my question.I have to stop looking at all the pretty pictures and do a little more reading!
Does anybody have a number of vehicles the Canadian army needed for the D-Day invasion? Derk. |
#5
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
I have something to add to this from DND papers studied by me. However, that may take time, and in the meantime can add that vehicle assembly in the UK was very slow in the period uo to the beginning of 1944. I allude to this in my book on Pearsons of Liverpool who were charged with holding a massive crates storage facility, along with one or two other sites.
For Canadian-UK monetary aid see my Paper at: http://www.gmhistorian.btinternet.co...IANDOLLARS.htm . Basically, from 1941 there was an agreement to supply Australia, NZ, and probably SA, with vehicles, equipment, etc. and payment was to be made through High Commissions in London. I suppose it was an equivalent of a 'Clearing House' with settlements either way. There must have been an awful lot of paperwork done in Canberra, Ottawa, Auckland, Pretoria, which was then sent to London! As is known the UK and the US also agreed a 'Reverse Lend-Lease' for vehicles, aircraft, etc. and the same general agreement over supplies to the other Dominions is documented. |
#6
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
This is an extract for your info:
Quote:
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
Then (oh you really gone and done it) you don't write the entire history of everything you know IN YOUR POST ON A SILLY INTERNET FORUM...well then, there's no hope for you. You must feel so ashamed. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bruce, I will take your post in the jest it was intended...
I don't care if someone has been in the game 50 years or 5 days, posting theories without being able to provide some form of primary source proof is just adding the the litany of myths and half-truths that exist in this industry. There is nothing that would make me happier then to have someone attach a scan from a document of CO giving instruction to draw BD for the invasion or what ever, but so far, I have not seen anything. Vets are great people, we own them a lot and they achieved great things, but they are human. Stories from Vets about kit, weapons, locations, events or daring do are just that, stories. Most Vets didn't give a rat’s backside about what they were issued or when, so enjoy the stories, right them down, but they are but one piece of the puzzle, to base a theory on one piece and one piece only is not good methodology. I am a Vet, from UNPROFOR, it was 17 years ago. If I told you that we had to paint our issue helmets blue when we got them in Croatia because Canada had to get there fast from Germany an there was not time to paint them in Lahr. Would you believe me? Remember, I was there, I am a Vet (and to boot I have 30 years collecting experience). |
#9
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
All of my books are based on historical record and I would prefer to rely on that than on the 60+ year memory of a veteran. Further, any individual CO may order or condone changes to Orders but it is the study of these Orders that tells us what the Army's intent was. It is Part 2 Orders that are fact - not the reminiscences of a veteran or the provenance of a uniform. I respect your knowledge and experience but your sweeping statements about wholesale replacement of all categories of materiel is hard to swallow. There is written support that all units, prior to embarkation, were to report shortfalls in their War Establishment. In all cases material was supplied at the embarkation point with British material - this included motorcycles, vehicles and smal arms and allowed for the replacement of material which was lost on the way to the embarkation point. Obviously the "Continuing Canadian Supply" policy was not observed in these cases. I don't understand the comment about British-made Canadian uniforms. The reason the Brits were making their economy pattern was because of their shortage of wool. If they were to re-clothe Canadians they would either do it with stocks of Canadian BD or they would issue British pattern BD, not a Brit-made Canadian pattern - and in which colour, British or Canadian? In any event, until I see documented evidence or other primary sources I will file this one as an interesting story.
__________________
Those who live by the sword will be shot by those of us who have progressed. - M38A1, 67-07800, ex LETE |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
All that occurred with a quarter million troops in WW2, and elsewhere for that matter, is not going to be found in orders or have a document trail.
And all that you say about museums, second hand stories from vets and wishful thinking is mostly true. But this is Peter Simundson we're talking about. If you knew him, or had dealt with him, you'll know his knowledge and experience will turn out to be better informed than you can otherwise prove with documents. Not one to exaggerate or make things up is Peter. Quite the opposite. He's one to listen to it all and sort out the likely from the crap. Coffee table books. Now you take that back!! |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In a few posts Vet's (which we are supposed to love and respect) have been called liars and unreliable sources, a uniform I've got on the rack doesnt exist in a canadian pattern and colour and a British maker's name, even though the guy who says it doesn't has never seen it, Clive, who has done a great job publishing a series of informative Canadian books calls himself a "coffee table" book publisher,(coffee table books are 99 cents at the remainder sale at bookstores and you all know what they are) and, a guy I've never met says I don't know what I've got here and it's all fake.
Boys the fakes are on E Bay and they turn up all the time. The crap is at the Militaria Shows and it's "original" ss uniforms and Canadian battledress jackets that a month ago had no flashes and now is 3rd div. original d day. It's kangaroo badges aged with a blowtorch or whatever. I'll give up annoying all you experts now. No more posts. I've had three phone calls asking me what's going on. Who is this Bruce Parker guy anyway??? Seems to me someone said he had a perfectly restored Fox (all covered with red fur?) and carrier. Both ground up Museum quality. Bruce I see a complete original list of WW2 Tac sign markings in your future. Simundson |
#12
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
May I just pick-up the reference to wool for uniforms? The Ministry of Supply acquired the whole Australian wool clip in 1939, thus frustrating as a coincidence, German plans to exchange wool for Opel cars and possibly trucks. I assume that as the war dragged on the availability of spare wool not required for the AEF etc. and shipping problems meant that the supply sagged?
![]() Reference to coffee table books reminds that I co-authored one: it was designed to be landscape format so as to sit nicely on tables! Regrettably only a handful of Canadian vehicle photos though. Of course, the discovery of 220 professional photos in a tin box that had survived unscathed was a miracle. It did however provide irrefutable evidence where relevant! Last edited by David_Hayward (RIP); 20-11-09 at 10:26. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
this is what makes the MLU furum best in the world....it gets down to the nitty gritty....best regards from a rather wet north-northumberland .
![]()
__________________
mally B |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter, please reread my posts. Nowhere did I say that Veterans were liars, that is your wordiong and your take on what was posted. As for using Veterans as sources, they are but one source, a human source.
With respect to Peter, I always find it strange that when people are challenged to support their statements and theories with some form of tangable proof, ie documents or at times even photographs they start with a 'smoke screen' in this case you work at the QOR Museum and then also fall back on how many years collecting they have. Both of those credentials are great, but where are the facts? Once the 'smoke screen' thins and they still cannot provide any supporting proff then it is the old story, of not ever going to post agian because the 'experts' are giving me a hard time. Peter, you work at the QOR Museum, you are sitting on what could potentially be a huge resource of information, mine it, find the answers and post them, don't run off. |
![]() |
|
|