By the age of 26 he had witnessed and experienced more than most people
see in an entire lifetime. He was a now a very different person from the
idealistic 20 year old who rushed to volunteer for ‘King and Country’, prior to
the outbreak of war in 1939.
Preserved by the Living God, my father returned home with an unshakeable
faith in Christ, forged during five years of adversity, privation and danger.
This faith was built on the many occasions in which he experienced the
miraculous intervention of the righteous right hand of the Lord.
In this final extract from his book, ‘We’ve Been a Long Time Coming
Boys’ my father describes his day of liberation and the subsequent
return journey to his home in rural Scotland.
“I think it was May 4th,
1945 that the long-awaited event took place. That evening our guards were on
patrol round the camp and we had decided to have an early night. When daybreak
came, there was no morning call. Slowly, it dawned on us that the guards had
gone, like shadows in the night. As usually happens in such circumstances, some
bright spark produced a two-way radio. Soon we were tuned into the advancing
Allied Forces. An American patrol was quite near. Instructions were received to
stay where we were. The hour of deliverance had come. That was May 5th and we
waited all day, hardly daring to breathe. Then, just before midnight, a tall
American soldier appeared, armed to the teeth, staggering along, obviously
jolly drunk. Who cared! We rushed forward to greet him like a long-lost friend.
I will never forget the guy's very first words in a deep Southern drawl.
"We’ve been a long time in coming boys” he said, "but we've sure made
it now".
No-one slept that night. Celebrations continued until dawn. When
daybreak came at last, the scenes that followed were to be seen to be believed.
On a piece of open ground outside our brickworks camp, an impromptu circus
quite spontaneously began. Vehicles abandoned by the Germans appeared on every
side. Lorries, vans, staff cars, combination motor-cycles, pedal bikes, even a
horse ridden by a jubilant prisoner-of-war, formed up in a circle and went
round and round like follow my leader, hour after hour.
How can I describe our emotions on that never-to-be-forgotten day —
excitement, tension, elation, triumph — all these and more, but always tempered
with caution at the dangers all around.
Later that week, transport from the 15th Scottish regiment arrived and
we were ferried away, first to Lubeck, then on to Luneberg. From there we were
to wait for the Lancaster bombers to fly us home to dear old Blighty again. In
a German barracks, we had the luxury of a shower, a shave, a de-louse and a set
of new clothes. What an outward transformation and an inward elation was
experienced that day.
Although we were assured there would be food in abundance, some men lit
fires on the parade ground, and began to cook food plundered from houses in
Rastow, where we had been released. Even now, they could not grasp the fact
that we would have food enough and to spare from the British Army Catering
Corps…………
Next morning we were on the tarmac, waiting for our four-engined taxis
to arrive. There were 400 flights from Luneberg to England that day and all
free. When our turn came to get aboard, I carefully eyed our Lancaster machine.
I'd never been close to one before, and it seemed a pretty patched-up job. On
its side were painted ninety-eight little bombs plus four pictures of parcels
of food. That was the number of its sorties over enemy territory, but none of
us cared. Our only thought was the fact that we were on our way home.
It took nearly three hours before we touched down at Stafford in
England. The plane seemed to wag its tail all the way, and being at that end, I
was very sick, but also very carefree. When at last we climbed out on British
soil, some men got down on their knees and kissed the ground. A reception party
of W.A.A.F. girls was awaiting our arrival. The first thing I said to my rather
attractive escort was, “Do you realise I haven't spoken to an English girl for
more than five years?” I doubt if she grasped the significance of what I said,
but for me, they were my “famous first words”.
That afternoon, we were transferred south to a camp in Surrey, and then
put on a train for home. Never was there such joy as on that journey. Every
village and town we passed through seemed to know who we were. Women waved
their dish-towels from their kitchen windows. Men took off their caps and threw
them into the air. It was a magnificent Welcome Home.
I think the highlight of that day for me was passing slowly through York
Station. On the platform stood a Salvation Army Band, and what were they
playing? I could hardly believe my ears. It was the theme tune of my very first
sermon in our prisoner-of-war camp, “The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want.
. . . Surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life...” I
must admit it brought a lump to my throat and tears to my eyes.
When we crossed the Border, my heart missed a beat. We were in Scotland
at last. Five-and-a-half years had come and gone since we had left our native
heath. Looking back now, we seemed to have been mere boys then, with little or
no experience of life, especially in time of war.
As our train rumbled on, my mind recalled those long weary years;
memories of excitement, of heartbreak, of tensions, of terror — you name it, we
had felt it all. The salt taste in one's mouth when confronted with death. Here
was a sure sign of real fear. Nights without sleep, days without peace, with
neither food nor drink nor rest; these were the things we all had to endure,
and now we who had come back were no longer mere boys but grown men.
At last, we arrived at Waverley Station in Edinburgh, and those going on
north had to change trains. Aberdeen, Banff, Keith, Dufftown, Aberlour — names
such as these and many more were being whispered in the night air.
Cautiously, even fearfully, we got down from our train. What a shock!
The scene that met our eyes there, I can never forget — the platform mobbed
with spectators (they somehow knew we were here), the blue dimness of the blackout,
the electric eerie silence, the shuffling of our feet. No one spoke. Everyone
just looked. People were pressing towards us, peering into our faces. As we
trailed slowly along, single file, I was terrified. Perhaps someone would know
me — maybe Uncle Bert. Suddenly, right behind me, a woman screamed “Wullie!”
That was all. No “Hullos” or “How are you?”, just one word — “Wullie”.
No words of mine-could add to that. Reunions, loved ones, friends, the
joy of freedom, the thoughts of being home, I could not describe these things
to anyone, but she did — in one word — His name, Wullie! That said it all.
I have little memory of our night ride northwards from Edinburgh. Some
of us changed at Aberdeen Joint Station, waving our comrades goodbye, and
continuing further on. At Craigellachie I was the only person to get off the
train. The time was around 8 a.m. Now only two miles from Aberlour, my own home
village, I was quite uncertain what to do. I hadn't even been in contact with
my parents to say I was on my way home. How stupid I had become after all these
years as a prisoner-of-war! After all, a quick phone call home would have
brought my father with all speed to pick me up in his motor-car.
As I stood on the little railway platform, wondering how to go about
things now, a postman, loading mail on to his G.P.O. van, asked where I was
going. When I told him, he offered to take me to his destination — Aberlour
Post Office. There I left him and set off up the High Street, heading for ‘Benview’,
my home.
What do you do at such a time when you reach your own house door? Ring
the bell or knock? I just turned the handle, walked straight in and called
“Anyone there?” What a greeting after all those years. A frail old lady rushed
towards me — my Mother! I hardly knew her. Then, down the stairs, face covered
with shaving soap — my Dad. What a reunion that was!”
The Lord is my shepherd;
I shall not want.
He makes me to lie down in green pastures;
He leads me beside the still waters.
He restores my soul;
He leads me in the paths of righteousness
For His name’s sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow
of death,
I will fear no evil;
For You are with me;
Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me.
You prepare a table before me in the presence of my
enemies;
You anoint my head with oil;
My cup runs over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me
All the days of my life;
And I will dwell in the house of the Lord
Forever.
We’ve Been A Long Time Coming Boys’ by Charles Morrison, Published by
Albyn Press ISBN 0284 98840 5
Available on Ebay.
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