




"Upper Lake" from a postcard collection
by Ken Clarke
It was early December 1944 when the brown
paper envelope dropped on our doormat at 13, Senlac Gardens, asking me
to report, in my Home Guard uniform, to "The Guards Depot" at Caterham
on the Hill in Surrey. I just thought they were just inviting me to Christmas
Dinner, but when I arrived there, four days early, they gave me a brand new
uniform and told me that I would be staying 'for the duration', whatever that
meant. They said "The Sergeant Major will look after you like a Mother"
but then they said that to all the other lads as well ! There were 20 of
us including a "Trained Soldier" crammed into this wooden hut with
a corrugated iron roof, with one cast-iron wood-burning stove in the centre.
The "Trained Soldier" already had a screen around his bed in the corner
and the rest of us fought for what we thought was the best bed space near the
stove.
|
Because in the Home Guard I had learned map-reading, orienteering, how to operate a two-way wireless set, (Able,Baker,Charlie,Dog,Easy,Fox . . . .it's all changed now), could fire several types of small-arms, including the Browning Automatic Rifle, and had thrown a few hand-grenades, they made me Squad-Leader and gave me a small "Stripe" to sew on my battle-dress. And so began my twelve weeks of isolation from the rest of the world, sleeping on boards, and shaving with cold water, while I too became a trained soldier. |
|
Guards Depot 1944 |
An Irish Guardsman, able to Troop the Colour, guard Buckingham Palace, drink Guinness, and find my way back to barracks in the blackout without a Compass.
