Oakville's WW1 veterans interviewed, 1978

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 344

  • @frankmid8515
    @frankmid8515 4 года назад +351

    Now this is what RUclips should be recommending instead of all that nonsense.

    • @scottkrafft6830
      @scottkrafft6830 4 года назад +7

      I can't believe their accents. Canadians nowadays sound JUST like Americans except when saying a few words, whereas these men still sound very British.

    • @2009blahblah
      @2009blahblah 3 года назад +1

      It does for me down like all the nonsense like this stuff

    • @eddt430
      @eddt430 3 года назад +2

      Couldn't agree more Frank.

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan 3 года назад +1

      @@scottkrafft6830
      Theres a large black community in Newfoundland with Irish accents.
      Irish accents are very common because of isolation. Same would be true of isolated English communities.
      Many British soldiers who served with Canadian regiments returned with their regiment.
      Including a British General who was being hunted by the I R A who fled after a Field Marshall was shot in London.
      He went to the Newfoundland Fusilliers to be close to his regiment, and carried 2 pistols and a knuckle duster everywhere he went
      The I R A found him.
      They were persuaded not to go through with the assassination because theyd never escape ,convinced by the catholic priest who they went to for confession that morning.
      Many veterans were paid as Auxiliary police and "Black and Tans" paid £1 a day to suppress the population. 1919 - 1921
      They created outrage by burning down 24 villages in 4 weeks , summary executions and torture.
      Many found that they could not return to Britain because of infamy and a large irish population there.

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan 3 года назад

      @@scottkrafft6830 60% of the population is 1st English then irish, then scottish. (102,000 today ) and the population in 1920 was only 3,000.......So, 2000 odd would have been English
      English 45,435 24.89%
      Scottish 31,870 17.46%
      Irish 30,795 18.72% (today)
      1841 550 -
      1871 1,684 +206.2%
      1901 1,643 −2.4%
      1911 2,372 +44.4%
      1921 3,298 +39.0%......................that implies that they were first or 2nd generation english, irish and scots.
      The children of those who moved there in 1871 would have been the right age for WW1.
      The only accent theyd learn would be from other english, scots or irish.

  • @lloyddutchsmiley1147
    @lloyddutchsmiley1147 8 лет назад +669

    It is kind of sad that they are all gone, forever, I hope they are all at peace now.

    • @cruzloera4931
      @cruzloera4931 6 лет назад +33

      True but veterans of the battle of Hastings, American revolution and civil war, Mexican revolution etc are gone too. Appreciate who we have now.

    • @nietjonah7328
      @nietjonah7328 5 лет назад +17

      cruz loera yeah but it’s extra sad because it is filmed and you know everyone in that video died.

    • @BookofProverbs
      @BookofProverbs 5 лет назад +1

      nietjonah facts

    • @parksyist
      @parksyist 5 лет назад +5

      Be a miracle if they weren't home by now

    • @maxlaroux6151
      @maxlaroux6151 5 лет назад +1

      LloydDutch Smiley more people like should exist

  • @SolomonJonaBoazCohen-cm8ln
    @SolomonJonaBoazCohen-cm8ln 10 месяцев назад +6

    The eyes of the first veteran... No words..

  • @jonesjack6088
    @jonesjack6088 5 лет назад +349

    I'm so glad someone thought to interview them while they could.

    • @o-o6355
      @o-o6355 4 года назад +1

      i agree, cause they're all gone now..0

    • @scottemmer3301
      @scottemmer3301 3 года назад +4

      World War II veterans will soon be all gone too. They are mostly already gone.

    • @jimbo5458
      @jimbo5458 3 года назад +3

      @@o-o6355 No shit Sherlock

    • @richardmiller3839
      @richardmiller3839 3 года назад

      Absolutely the interviews and footage has to be copied many times in different formats and preserved in Many places to ensure survival forevermore.

    • @collmac1974
      @collmac1974 2 месяца назад +1

      100% agreed ❤someone had the thought to record the story’s from these legends who were passing through life like 👍 the rest of us

  • @danielmanning2319
    @danielmanning2319 5 лет назад +371

    Crazy how not a single person who fought in the war is still alive. 70 million military personnel total and they are all gone.

    • @parksyist
      @parksyist 5 лет назад +66

      They'd have to be over 120 now so it's not crazy really

    • @-t96
      @-t96 5 лет назад +25

      It seems crazy but then you go deeper and realize the trillion on trillions on TRILLIONS of people who are dead right now and it's not all that shocking

    • @Tony-nj9de
      @Tony-nj9de 4 года назад +32

      is more sad to think ww2 vets will be gone too

    • @jacobw5460
      @jacobw5460 4 года назад +45

      @@-t96 It is currently estimated that around 100 billion people have ever lived, not trillions lol

    • @corycampman7336
      @corycampman7336 4 года назад +6

      Michael style trillions and trillions of people have never existed I think you meant billions

  • @paulbrasier372
    @paulbrasier372 4 года назад +58

    I fondly remember sitting on my grandfather's lap asking him to tell me about his days in WW1. Also he would tell me stories of his grandfather telling him stories of his days in the Civil War.

  • @pmccoy8924
    @pmccoy8924 Год назад +11

    This is why Donald S. Cherry was upset people ignore veteran sacrifice and neglect wearing the poppy. These men right here.

  • @warrenchambers4819
    @warrenchambers4819 4 года назад +88

    The hell these men witnessed and lived thru. My God. Heros everyone.

    • @stevens5541
      @stevens5541 3 года назад

      Why are they heroes? They are murderers

    • @warrenchambers4819
      @warrenchambers4819 3 года назад +10

      @@stevens5541 That all ya got? Murderers huh? Well okay then PFFFT. Enjoy the safety and quality of life you have protected by Murderers, if they weren't things would be very different for you big mouth. Just how would you get an invading army out of your home? Big hug? Thinking as you do I'd say your the "live on my knees" kinda guy rather than die on your feet fighting for those you love (if your capable of that emotion)

    • @johndemeen5575
      @johndemeen5575 3 года назад +2

      Steven S You dumb ass! All heroes. We enjoy this life, from there giving, some gave all. What have you given? Thanks from.St. Paul Minnesota.

    • @JingleJangleJam
      @JingleJangleJam 6 месяцев назад

      @@warrenchambers4819 The Great War caused the rise of fascism, world war 2, a great many famines and pestilences of disease spread perhaps via the mice that lived on fresh rotting corpses akin with to the Dark Ages of Europe, economic collapse. I don't have any family on my father's side because of it except my dad. Yeah, real great ''safety'' it brought, didn't it?
      My father's family died for nothing but the ignorance, violence and imbecility of humanity.
      It could have all been avoided and that poor boy who was intervewed as a man in this video could have avoided seeing the guts of another man splattered all over his field of vision while he was still an impresionnable young lad.
      I'm not at all proud they had to murder Germans, it created such an emnity and horror to Germany through paranoia and fear that it gave the compost on the weeds of Hitler's rise there, and for good reason Germany was scared of the world - look how cruelly it got treated. They didn't deserve the nasty barbarism our civilization decayed into in those years.

  • @Wooley689
    @Wooley689 8 лет назад +154

    Happy these were done and now shared, otherwise these first person accounts would be lost forever. Tks.

    • @RavishingSailor
      @RavishingSailor 8 лет назад +3

      I just came across this fantastic time capsule. Thank god for film and to the uploader but most of all thank god for the internet and youtube that let us have access to such amazing historical treasure.

  • @TheDondajonhon46
    @TheDondajonhon46 5 лет назад +81

    The greatest men to have ever walk the earth!

  • @eogg25
    @eogg25 5 лет назад +71

    When I was a kid in High School, there was a WW1 vet living a few houses away from me and when he would sit outside my friend and I would talk to him. he passed away and they said his war injury, bad lungs were partly the cause of his death.

    • @LusCrowley
      @LusCrowley 4 года назад +3

      When did he pass away if you don’t mind me asking

    • @eogg25
      @eogg25 4 года назад +15

      @@LusCrowley it had to be after 1953 but before 1960. I was in High school when i first met him

    • @noc805
      @noc805 4 года назад +4

      Wow how old are you now sir

    • @eogg25
      @eogg25 4 года назад +9

      @@noc805 I left Germany about two months before Elvis Presley got there and by the way we both used the same transport ship to get to Germany. the USS General Randal. I will let you figure out how old I am but I am older than what the other commenter thinks I am.

    • @noc805
      @noc805 4 года назад +3

      @@eogg25 I think you are in your late 70s now sir, i would say 78 or 79, must be nice having those memories

  • @carthy29
    @carthy29 2 года назад +4

    10 billion plus shells fired in ww1 i read some where before, was a certain kind of hell that war, thanks for uploading this

  • @odfkjdhgovj
    @odfkjdhgovj 4 года назад +20

    The way the first veteran, Mr. Wood, recalls the trenches in the first clip and his expression changes and his face turns to sheer horror and despair as the memories come back to him. You can tell he hadn’t relived those for a long time until that moment.
    Must really be hard to live with such dark memories.
    Rest in piece all those that fought for you and me in WWI and WWII. Eternally grateful to all of you for this easy life I have.

    • @oldsport2016
      @oldsport2016 Год назад

      I was literally thinking the same thing it’s almost like I could feel his pain 😞

    • @bandicootcollector
      @bandicootcollector 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, he was talking about rats on the parapet, and then something hit him...a bad memory.

    • @peterbassey9668
      @peterbassey9668 6 месяцев назад +1

      ...their gift of the easy life which you're all chucking away now to other invaders. I'm Nigerian and cannot believe how far down the West has sunk in the name of bleeding heart migration. FYI I'm still in my country Nigeria and intend to stay there for the rest of my natural life.

  • @dancesario9132
    @dancesario9132 4 года назад +26

    It's a shame there isn't more WW1 veteran interviews on youtube.

  • @armwrestlingsecrets
    @armwrestlingsecrets 4 года назад +7

    FANTASTIC VIDEO!! Both of my Great Uncles fought (and died) at Vimy Ridge.

  • @KarlPHorse
    @KarlPHorse 2 года назад +7

    I can't get over the fact that these men were already elderly in the late 70's, and yet the last of them passed in the 2010's.
    Human lifespan is amazing.

  • @doa_824
    @doa_824 4 года назад +92

    I wish these men were still alive 😪 last living ww1 veterans died in 2012 😪

    • @nibsin
      @nibsin 3 года назад +1

      Wasn't it 2011?

    • @johnnyb7628
      @johnnyb7628 3 года назад +4

      @@nibsin no it was 2012. Joined at a young age, I believe the vet was an ambulance driver.

    • @katiec972
      @katiec972 3 года назад +2

      @@johnnyb7628 do you know how old he was when he died?

  • @RavishingSailor
    @RavishingSailor 8 лет назад +73

    damn I feel so young. January 18th 1978 here. God bless to all Veterans out there... Hooyah...PS. Thank you for up loading this fantastic interview or rather pseudo documentary.

    • @jonnyb-l8826
      @jonnyb-l8826 7 лет назад

      Deathfromabove sadly there a no world war 1 veterans left. Unless you meant veterans in general

    • @sandrostaub5991
      @sandrostaub5991 3 года назад

      January 18th 1997 here, i would've been around the exact age to go join the war if born 100years earlier

  • @davisworth5114
    @davisworth5114 3 года назад +14

    British veteran Harry Patch was the last survivor of the war, he passed in 2009. He said the war was nothing but "legalized murder".

  • @marks.c4753
    @marks.c4753 4 года назад +5

    Sadly my grandfather passed in 72 was gassed disabled from the mountains of Tennessee miss you Charlie .RIP.

  • @aussierandomfamilyvideos2732
    @aussierandomfamilyvideos2732 8 лет назад +59

    Very emotional, I really appreciate the sharing this video.

  • @davidgiles5030
    @davidgiles5030 4 года назад +40

    I became a member of the Oakville Police Force June 28th, 1971. I knew some of these men. Both my grandfather's fought in WW 1. Both agreed that it was a war about an argument between King's who were related. Millions dead for nothing. WW2 had to be fought,but it was necessitated by the First War. We've learned nothing over the centuries.

    • @aaaab384
      @aaaab384 2 года назад +1

      hey canada, maybe learn orthography, thank you.

    • @jacobkudrowich
      @jacobkudrowich 2 года назад

      @@aaaab384darn aren't you smart , I had to lookup what orthography even meant

    • @aaaab384
      @aaaab384 2 года назад

      @jacobkudrowich4507 wtf. Never been to elementary school? Or just canadian?

    • @heccsclips3319
      @heccsclips3319 Год назад +1

      ​@@aaaab384show some respect

    • @aaaab384
      @aaaab384 Год назад

      @@heccsclips3319 To the dumbass who has never heard about orthography and thinks that "lookup" is a verb? Yes, lots of respect, canada.

  • @matthewl9528
    @matthewl9528 Год назад +6

    Are they from Oakville, Canada? If so it’s amazing that their regional English accents are still so strong.

    • @user-sh2ij8hy9p
      @user-sh2ij8hy9p 4 месяца назад +2

      they are! as proof you can see the scotiabank logo in the background during the march. it's really extraordinary the changes in accent that have occurred in this country

    • @gdlmao
      @gdlmao 9 дней назад +1

      For the first 50 years after Confederation, Anglo Canada was a patchwork of English, Scottish, Irish, and even Welsh accents, depending where you lived. Over half of the Canadians who volunteered in 1914-1918 were born in the UK, such was the immigration policies of the day. The modern "Canadian" accent is still very regionally dependant and consists of a blend of all the above dialects in different proportions, depending where you are in Canada. Rural Alberta, for instance, was heavily influenced by Ulster and Lowland Scots and you can still pick up bits of it in the slang and inflection of the English spoken there.

    • @infidel202
      @infidel202 7 дней назад +1

      ​@@gdlmao well said mate, it's the same in Australia 🇦🇺

  • @courthebrave
    @courthebrave 4 года назад +13

    I’m learning about this war in my world history class. I’m so thankful i found this video. God bless all the brave people involved in this war. May they rest in peace.

  • @firefn6945
    @firefn6945 Месяц назад

    Thank you Oakville Town. My nan was about 9, in London England during WW1. Always forever grateful to our Canadian friends and the 5 eyes for watching over one another like brothers in this world. My hat goes off to you. ❤

  • @vacciniumaugustifolium1420
    @vacciniumaugustifolium1420 4 года назад +29

    And sadly, we approach that moment quickly enought with the WWII, most of them are in their 90's

    • @Paint_Eater
      @Paint_Eater 3 года назад +3

      I not just realized that we don’t have much longer with ww2 vets when my grandpa died in 2019(he was a chemical engineer in his late twenties when had started on project Manhattan) and I started to really think about the fact we don’t have much time left with those wonderful people.

  • @russiangamerlegobuilder1912
    @russiangamerlegobuilder1912 4 года назад +9

    The greatest men to walk the earth and they served valiantly and risked their lives so that we could be a free country and we will always remember them for all eternity

  • @francispitts9440
    @francispitts9440 3 года назад +4

    My grandfather served in the Marine Corps in WW I in France and told me stories when I was a kid. Incredible stories and what he saw.

  • @timcrowdy9549
    @timcrowdy9549 7 лет назад +46

    Thank you brave men.

  • @dean1039
    @dean1039 5 лет назад +16

    Look at a map of Europe in 1914, then look at one from 1978 and just think of how much change these men had seen over their life.

  • @wocookie2277
    @wocookie2277 4 года назад +20

    The first gentleman comes to tears at the thought of the trenches. I served in Afghanistan and there’s times that do the same for me. Why does man not realize that the endeavours of war is what keeps man from becoming a worthy being. We all crave the same thing, a fair chance. Only the greedy have an excuse for war.

    • @nyc-loner
      @nyc-loner 3 года назад

      🤍

    • @jimmycakes7158
      @jimmycakes7158 2 года назад

      I don't understand, why join the military if only the "greedy" want war

  • @kimjongroid7945
    @kimjongroid7945 7 лет назад +47

    God bless these brave men and R.I.P

  • @mikes6970
    @mikes6970 6 лет назад +31

    Them and ww2 vets were my heros growing up .. now im older i remember the sadness in them all .. great men .. look atbkids heros today .. what happened ...

    • @jjcapo3426
      @jjcapo3426 4 года назад +3

      im a kid and the ww2 veterans and the soldiers fighting overseas in afghanistan and iraq are also my heroes

    • @mikes6970
      @mikes6970 4 года назад +3

      @@jjcapo3426 God bless ya son .... these kids were kids ..... 20yr olds flying bombers.. in my country . New Zealand ... ww1 ww2 effected everyhouse ..... every family .. being such a small population , had family fighting .... when i grew up it was still raw in peoples minds .... it was 15yrs ago ... now im old i realise that 15yrs ago was yesterday ... now i know why they didnt talk .. they all drank in their sheds all wkend and at night ... always a touch of sadness in them .... if theyspoke about the war .. u listened ,i could see the tears behind their eyes .... so glad that they have been interviewed .. should be shown in schools ..... so war is personalised .... then it hits home .. like it did to us older people ... my mum is in her 90s .. i still see the tears talking about uncles, cousins etc that were never seen again ...

    • @jjcapo3426
      @jjcapo3426 4 года назад +3

      Mike S I'm quoting this off of someone else but they said "War is where the young and stupid are tricked by the old and wise to go kill eachother"

    • @mikes6970
      @mikes6970 4 года назад

      @@jjcapo3426 so true ..

  • @stephenholmes1036
    @stephenholmes1036 10 месяцев назад +2

    I met a few veterans in my youth brave men who went through hell for us.

  • @quiksix25
    @quiksix25 6 лет назад +11

    The interviews are amazing

  • @teatime6597
    @teatime6597 4 года назад +12

    "Damn big man eater!" Never heard that expression before for an artillery shell. Those kind of little peculiar things only people who were there know are fascinating with interviews like this.

    • @discoveryman59
      @discoveryman59 3 года назад +3

      Damn big man eater was he not talking about a Rat?

    • @Paint_Eater
      @Paint_Eater 3 года назад +2

      @@discoveryman59 1:55 he says “y’know what that was? A big man eater, a rat” I think they called them man eaters because rats would devour the organs of corpses in No mans land.

  • @davidchristen5509
    @davidchristen5509 7 лет назад +44

    Proud to be Canadian 🇨🇦

    • @douglaslyckholm1857
      @douglaslyckholm1857 6 лет назад +6

      David Christen just remember that you have justin trudeau

    • @Hannie.Schaft
      @Hannie.Schaft 6 лет назад +2

      I'm sure you're proud! You did an excellent job being born in exactly the right place! Great thing you've done there buddy!

    • @griffoliver6997
      @griffoliver6997 6 лет назад +2

      Winning Grinn it’s an outstanding country

    • @vacciniumaugustifolium1420
      @vacciniumaugustifolium1420 4 года назад

      @@douglaslyckholm1857Trudeau>Biden>Trump

    • @Donnyf3841
      @Donnyf3841 3 года назад

      Vaccinium augustifolium Trump isn’t even the president anymore. I see he lives rent free in your low IQ head.

  • @UnbiasedTravelDad
    @UnbiasedTravelDad 3 года назад +1

    Here I am at home in 2021 and the worst of my worries in lockdown in Sydney Australia. What these brave people dealt with during war are the stuff of nightmares.
    May they all Rest In Peace and hopefully their nightmare is over

  • @TheDisabledMechanic
    @TheDisabledMechanic 3 года назад +1

    I remember as a child I was in grade school and WWI veterans would come and talk to us about the history of what happened. It is so crazy to think they are all gone.

  • @XNightRadio
    @XNightRadio 3 года назад +1

    3:50 If you look you can tell he still can see everything he is talking about vividly. Like he is there. So amazing and beautiful.

  • @frankmartinez4856
    @frankmartinez4856 Год назад +1

    Only met two WW1, Vets! First in 1966, other in 1974, before I joined the Marines at VFW station 💕😬

  • @m_ardnassac660
    @m_ardnassac660 5 лет назад +5

    Proud to be from the same town as these brave men

  • @Luthoran
    @Luthoran 3 года назад +3

    I'm only 20 and my dad's really into war documentaries and served in the army. I really appreciate everything these soldiers have gone through to protect us man. It hurts and it sickens me to think as the brave men lying taking their last breaths were thinking or even screaming for their mothers or father's etc. It's frightening to think about. War is pure evil WW1 would of been so awful in the trenches. If you didn't run out you got shot onsight for cowardness, to think how young all these soldiers were man. No matter what I hope they get a special place in heaven man

  • @macattack9184
    @macattack9184 7 месяцев назад +4

    We still think about you guys

  • @renanribeiro8137
    @renanribeiro8137 5 лет назад +29

    *Well ... Even with all the veterans of the Great War having already died, the world still has many veterans and their historys. Iraq,Vietnam,Korea and even some WWII veterans are still alive*

  • @kp6405
    @kp6405 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for this video it truly is amazing and these memories accounts true history need to be saved and passed passed on

  • @jonpettet7085
    @jonpettet7085 5 месяцев назад

    many thanks for the upload..

  • @caroll3309
    @caroll3309 4 года назад +5

    Very interesting video I always sense a terrible sadness with these WW1 men in particular as they had to harbour all those dark memories to themselves for many years. They were only young men when they went to war but it was the unfortunate era of having to be stiff upper lipped and not letting their emotions show. And when the war was over they were expected to just fit back into society imagine having to do that

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 3 года назад +1

      You couldn't talk about Vietnam when we came home, it makes people feel guilty. My father threw me out of the house when I came home because I told him the war was wrong. No one in my family knows any thing about my war experiences and like these men we all carry the anguish of lost friends forever, veterans carry the darkness while society runs away. Both my grandfathers fought in France.

  • @YblockEnthusiast
    @YblockEnthusiast 3 года назад +1

    Don't be sad that their gone, be glad they were around and shared their wisdom to us.

  • @2077barrie
    @2077barrie 4 месяца назад +1

    My Great Grandfather was an Artillery man and survived. My Great Uncle was 18 when he was killed in March 6th 1916 in Arras. My God, what would they think of society today. Very hard times but the poor souls knew little if anything what to expect. A whole generation of fine young men wiped out, both Allied and German. In 2024, the world has changed little.

  • @julast6658
    @julast6658 4 года назад +7

    Brave brave men - i feel your strength every day.

  • @brittclower8606
    @brittclower8606 4 года назад +5

    MINDBLOWING!!!! GOD Bless from Texas. Y’all ‘s bravery was and still is second to none. WW1 the war that doomed the world over elitists greed and hurt feelings. RIP. 🇬🇧 🇺🇸

    • @pauldirac808
      @pauldirac808 2 года назад +1

      Same thing is still going on today mate .

  • @theoutsider4066
    @theoutsider4066 3 года назад

    Those men would no doubt say that they were ''just doing their job'', but they were each & every one of them , absolute unsung heroes. Thank you for your service genlemen, may you & all of your fallen comrades rest in peace.

  • @leeetchells609
    @leeetchells609 3 года назад +2

    They were just young lads around 20 years old and they had to endure that horror. The memories are still fresh in their minds 60 years later.
    They never forgot that horror.
    They tried but they couldn't.

  • @katawa100
    @katawa100 5 лет назад +4

    A rare & precious gem in the vault of history

  • @kts5920
    @kts5920 4 года назад +2

    It's crazy that all the WW2 veteran's are the same ages as the WW1 veteran's was in the 70's and 80'S, R.I.P to all the WW1/WW2 veteran's 💙🙏🌹🕊️💙

  • @Tanerk24
    @Tanerk24 6 лет назад +30

    It's sad to see that in 1978 world war 1 had ended 60 years ago (still pretty long ago) and there were still many veterans left. Pretty sad how time passes so quickly it has been 40 years since 1978 and 100 years since world war 1 has ended. And there probably isnt even one world war 1 veteran alive

    • @netneutrality5461
      @netneutrality5461 6 лет назад +18

      Unfortunately the last WW1 veteran to pass away was in 2012.

    • @Tanerk24
      @Tanerk24 6 лет назад +1

      @@netneutrality5461 yes I know RIP to all who served

    • @Tanerk24
      @Tanerk24 6 лет назад +3

      @@netneutrality5461 young people go suffer in ww1 and ww2 and old people plan it out

    • @forgttenjungle1248
      @forgttenjungle1248 6 лет назад

      Very few of World War II too, how many are left?

    • @Tanerk24
      @Tanerk24 6 лет назад +2

      @@forgttenjungle1248 probably in their hundred of thousands. Pretty sad there won't be any left in the next 15-20 years. I've been blessed to meet 6 WW2 Veterans. I live in New York and every year in Washington DC on the first of September, they have a WW2 Remembrance day where lots of WW2 veterans come. I still remember it was very hot and I was impressed on how the old men were able to stand in that heat 😅

  • @5888max
    @5888max 6 лет назад +22

    All honour to these men -I was very interested that these Canadian men I presume born in the 1890's had British accents where as Canadian's today have American ones

    • @townofoakville
      @townofoakville  6 лет назад +19

      These men were born and raised in the UK, and immigrated to Canada and became Canadian citizens post WW1. They retained their accents even after living 40 - 50 years in Canada.

    • @5888max
      @5888max 6 лет назад

      So they are British veterans not Canadian one's?

    • @townofoakville
      @townofoakville  6 лет назад +4

      @@5888max I suspect so given the strength of the accents after living in Canada for so many years; it seems logical they served with the British Expeditionary forces as young men, and emigrated to Canada post WW1.

    • @TheAllyMor
      @TheAllyMor 5 лет назад +6

      British, Canadian, doesn't matter. We are forever grateful for their sacrifice. PS. I'm from the far north of Scotland and one a few Shands. I wonder if your chap there was related....

    • @diggledoggle4192
      @diggledoggle4192 5 лет назад +3

      Britain and Canada were one in the same back then, not so much nowadays

  • @theram4320
    @theram4320 3 года назад +1

    We can't imagine how these brave souls suffered in the years after the war. Nightmares, flashbacks, regrets, days without sleep, still they went on.

  • @haroldofcardboard
    @haroldofcardboard 4 года назад +1

    thank you f or this. are some of these amazing fellas british veterans? i cannot pinpoint thier accents. thank you for amazing upload and stunning footage. treasure!

  • @ogood813
    @ogood813 5 лет назад +49

    Just think about every soldier that maybe saved his brothers and killed man after man and fought for his life in hand to hand combat but was killed in the next days push or an artillery shell fell on him and erased his past from history with nobody being able to share what he had done

    • @520angling5
      @520angling5 3 года назад +1

      Billy talent

    • @ogood813
      @ogood813 3 года назад +1

      @@520angling5 yes sir.. saw them live twice

  • @richardmiller3839
    @richardmiller3839 3 года назад +2

    History must be preserved.

  • @elizabethtamp1537
    @elizabethtamp1537 3 года назад

    Very pleased to hear these real accounts by these veterans. God bless them all.

  • @weeballsbigpenis4114
    @weeballsbigpenis4114 4 года назад +5

    Imagine surviving ww1 and living to 100 yo plus and seeing the development of War through the years

  • @rdhudon7469
    @rdhudon7469 3 года назад +4

    I was told my when my Grandfather came back to Canada from WWI he packed his war chest , medals and all and disposed of it and never spoke a word about it for the rest of his life . RIP

    • @singtweetypie
      @singtweetypie 3 года назад +1

      How sad but totally understandable. It was an absolutely brutal war.

  • @gerardsgunsmore4974
    @gerardsgunsmore4974 Год назад

    Even in there older ages they still marched proudly, like a soldier with his shoulders back and head high. What a group of men that has walked this earth.

  • @LtFrankDrebbin
    @LtFrankDrebbin 4 года назад +5

    I'm glad I'm old enough to remember WW1 vet marching on ANZAC day.

  • @pbegley99
    @pbegley99 7 лет назад +125

    Nowadays young students, the same age now that these men were in WW1, get "trigger warnings" of any material in their courses which might upset them. They're warned in case they READ something which upsets them. Not experience something upsetting but read about it. What have we become?

    • @ewcc8847
      @ewcc8847 7 лет назад +21

      pbegley99 I don't know but I hate it

    • @Lava1964
      @Lava1964 7 лет назад +12

      Mollycoddled wimps--that's what we've become.

    • @Teebsy312
      @Teebsy312 7 лет назад +14

      We have become incredibly weak

    • @rhysnichols8608
      @rhysnichols8608 7 лет назад +12

      We haven't become weak, THEY have, maybe you have, but I haven't.

    • @rhysnichols8608
      @rhysnichols8608 7 лет назад

      Nathan Chancellor
      Good but quite a few people have issues because they are not hardened

  • @joeblow9657
    @joeblow9657 2 года назад +2

    Notice how all the veterans have British accents despite living in Canada?

  • @steven_2005-z4f
    @steven_2005-z4f Год назад +1

    The last American WW1 veteran died in 2011 at age 110.

  • @daviddilley2053
    @daviddilley2053 2 года назад +1

    This is beautiful. These are the last voices to warn us of what the future holds. History shall repeat itself if the lesson was not learned.

  • @penguinproductions7014
    @penguinproductions7014 3 года назад

    Thank you all ❤️

  • @AlexG1020
    @AlexG1020 4 года назад +3

    I feel bad for Leonard Wood, you can tell on his face the war was traumatizing. Still effecting him after all those years.

  • @lldart8270
    @lldart8270 4 года назад +2

    They won’t be forgot

  • @josephlitteral
    @josephlitteral 8 месяцев назад +1

    Every generation of veterans comes back a little less destroyed than the previous… a broken tool is still a broken broken tool… we are just getting our tools back in less pieces than previous generations… it’s easier to mend, but broken is still broken!!! 💯❤️

  • @kaycox5555
    @kaycox5555 7 лет назад +9

    Fascinating

  • @stanborg4755
    @stanborg4755 2 месяца назад

    Grandpa was there. Born in 1894, died 1969. Born in Nebraska. His parents were German Austrian immigrants. He spoke German well. He was a medic with a field hospital and a courier and rode a motorcycle. At some point he was put in with German prisoners so he could get intelligence from overhearing the prisoners.

  • @xJoe90
    @xJoe90 3 года назад +2

    God bless them all.

  • @judahsmall3023
    @judahsmall3023 Год назад +1

    If you did not know, the last surviving World War 1 veteran died in 2011 at the age of 110.

  • @johnbell2677
    @johnbell2677 Месяц назад

    So sad that everything they went through was for nothing, if they were alive today they would cry! And a mention to all the woman who had to deal with these blokes on their return and through their life. A strong peoples

  • @Sailor1010
    @Sailor1010 7 месяцев назад +1

    They were old even in the 70’s

  • @24flyingcats84
    @24flyingcats84 3 года назад

    This is so moving. What incredible men, they lived through hell.

  • @WorldCupWillie
    @WorldCupWillie 4 года назад +2

    So all these veterans moved to Canada after the war? It's interesting how their accents are still strong. I've known people move to Canada or America and their accent changes after a year.

    • @dsutton777
      @dsutton777 4 года назад

      Alot were from Canada who had 1,000,000+ soldiers going over to fight.. including a few of my great great Canadian uncles

    • @SpitfireMLG
      @SpitfireMLG 3 года назад

      I feel like if you grew up somewhere, it's quite hard to change accent after that unless you make a conscious effort to

  • @RoBoVader
    @RoBoVader 5 лет назад +4

    Did this guy make it into the "They shall not grow old" movie?

    • @x-man5374
      @x-man5374 5 лет назад

      RoBoVader no. The last ww1 vet died a few years ago

    • @levity90
      @levity90 5 лет назад

      he may have. The voices and stories used were probably taken from old interviews such as this.

  • @zibabird
    @zibabird 5 лет назад

    Thank you.

  • @MintTree117
    @MintTree117 3 года назад

    Cool to see this.

  • @davekellyn.n.8873
    @davekellyn.n.8873 4 года назад +2

    my dads grandmas uncles brother fought in ww1 he was a Scottish solider during a battle he got shot in the stomach later where he died in a French hospital

  • @whitetroutchannel
    @whitetroutchannel 4 года назад

    thank you

  • @kennymilne2176
    @kennymilne2176 4 года назад +3

    God bless them all

  • @Taylor-sv7tm
    @Taylor-sv7tm 6 лет назад +7

    Lest we forget.

    • @Taylor-sv7tm
      @Taylor-sv7tm 6 лет назад +1

      Thank you for the upload, very emotional and educational, these should be televised more so that the younger generations can have the choice to educate themselves and appreciate what these great men did for us.

    • @davidmarshall1259
      @davidmarshall1259 5 лет назад

      @@Taylor-sv7tm indeed.

    • @peterbassey9668
      @peterbassey9668 6 месяцев назад

      Oh no, as a Nigerian I can assure you you've all forgotten. You've done far worse even, you've betrayed those men and women who paid a costly price with their lives to give you the liberties and the good life you had since those wars ended.

  • @sega64official
    @sega64official 4 года назад +1

    Albert Winn seems like a very classy fellow.

  • @96Duelfuel
    @96Duelfuel Год назад

    This is great

  • @philglover2973
    @philglover2973 4 года назад +1

    God bless you all rest in peace 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧

  • @gadgetgus
    @gadgetgus 8 месяцев назад +1

    We stand on the shoulders of men with giant hearts ♥️
    They gave their today,
    For our tomorrow...
    🙏🕯🪽

  • @michelebartoli7648
    @michelebartoli7648 4 года назад

    Beautiful

  • @sarahlutz5111
    @sarahlutz5111 3 года назад

    ah man, that first gentleman starting to cry made me want to cry, too

  • @karlkkanin6809
    @karlkkanin6809 3 года назад

    Looking at someone from the old generation almost burst in to tears talking about something, our generation should just pay attention! Since this was people that was not so easy offended.

  • @infotration2225
    @infotration2225 Год назад

    All of these are my dead human fellows. Love 😢

  • @mckessa17
    @mckessa17 3 года назад +1

    Oakville is a wealthy town that had alot of British people.

  • @GSDhandler1
    @GSDhandler1 3 года назад +1

    I went paintballung once and we set up an ambush near a stream. It was the perfect ambush, my heart was beating out of my chest. Then I thought, imagine if this was for real and this was live ammunition. Imagine if the stench of death was in the air. Imagine being covered in lice, imagine being hungry and thirsty. Imagine all your friends dead. Imagine the thought of never seeing home again.
    I let the ambush play out and just sat there thinking of these guys.