England - Maneuvers on and off the training fields
Arriving with the regiment just prior to Christmas, Cederberg and his compatriots fell into a deep funk of home sickness that exploring London and trying to figure out what the Cockneys might actually be saying helped to lessen.
Not long after they arrived, the senior officers and NCOs that had raised the Regiment were all to be sent home as being too old for combat. Most of these men were WWI veterans and took it in their stride of understanding how the army worked. The men were not so accomadating. The leadership were replaced with what came to be called "the Montrealers" At first this was not term of endearment. After a couple of weeks things came to a head and the Regiment basically went on strike. To quote Cowshit :
Quote:
"You know what 'no' means?" a Highlander yelled from a window.
"I think I do" replied the new RSM.
"Then fuck off!"
The men were willing to tell a Colonel where to head in but a LtGen showed up to work things out and ignoring him would have been too far for even these men who where still civilians in uniform. Things improved and one of the Alex Joes put the learning experience best :
Quote:
"Being in the army is like breaking your leg and learning to live with it"
As things settled down in the routine of training, transfers, promotions and the daily grind and routine of soldiering the home sickness lessened and the discipline increased. The Regiment became home and the men it brothers. By now Cederberg had been promoted twice ( after his uncle left for home, he would not accept a promotion with him still around ) and was a Sargent in the support platoon. The training schemes got more and more complex and the confidence of the men increased.
All was not army and training. The people of England welcomed these young men into their homes and the weddings abounded. Fred Cederberg was...
[ Continued ]