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Oliver James Cole
Published Online August 3, 2022
Last Edited August 3, 2022
My friends were all going in so I just thought I’d go with them, I guess. I signed up in Charlottetown, Beach Cove, and I took training there. I went to Halifax after that and did some more training and then overseas in 1942. I was a cook, 13th Field Artillery [Regiment], 78th Battery. I cooked for the regiment. I was a D-Day veteran and I cooked for them all the time. I was lucky I never got wounded.
I’m a D-Day veteran; we got off the boat and waded to shore, water to our waist. When I got in the field the field kitchen was there, so I got the tea pot on and we had hard tack and corned beef. That was our lunch, first day.
I went to France for D-Day, Holland, Germany, Belgium. Our first break was 54 days; we had that in Ghent, Belgium.
I was getting dinner ready in Germany when they said the war was over. I didn’t have to eat the dinner!
I was married overseas during the war. I was married in Edinburgh, Scotland and we had our honeymoon in Glasgow, Scotland. Then after that the wife moved down to London with me and then I got posted. She went back to Scotland again and I didn’t see her until after the war.
I was one of the first D-Day veterans to get annual leave after the war.