5731671 Tpr Williams R
A/TK Troop, HQ Squadron
43rd Recce Regt, Recce Corps, Armed Forces
Tuesday
My Darling Chotie,
I'm in a lecture at the moment, so I'm writing this in my notebook under pretext of taking some notes… I got your letter this morning - for which many thanks. Hope you can read this scrawl but I never could write on my knee. Glad to hear you celebrated your birthday in style - wish I could have been with you.
(The bloke here is a yawning on about internal combustion engines - very dull after six weeks of it.)
By the way - in your last letter but one, you told me about your ‘change of employment ', but it was, if you remember, in the form of a postscript, which I missed of course, at the first reading. When reading it again at a later date (a very sound habit of mine), I came across it, and needless to say, would have congratulated you in my last epistle. Anyhow - nice work.
(I very much doubt whether you can make head or tail of this scrawl. I've got a job to understand it myself - but persevere, Darling.) I have to keep answering questions all the time to this wretched man - a Sergeant from the Ordnance Corps. Up to now, I've managed to keep just one jump ahead of him. He's not really very bright - typical of the R.A.O.C.*, but writing a letter as well has its snags.
I've been enquiring about my leave, and may get it on the 16th i.e. next Wednesday (a week today), but it seems rather doubtful. What can you manage if I do? I'm afraid I can't say definitely, because the Squadron Office don't know themselves.
I've been put on fire guard for a week (!) which means I work evenings as well. I haven't been out since I've been here. Not that there's anything of interest. I went out on an exercise yesterday morning, and passed through some marvellous villages, would have delighted Frances B. Young**.
Glad to hear you met Jones. Where is he stationed these days, or didn't he tell you? Did I tell you that Brinner was on a course in North Devon?
Are the old Dorsets*** still with you? It would mean that they've been there a year now.
I've got a cross country to run this evening after tea, a Devil, isn't it, seeing that I haven't done PT of any sort for seven or eight weeks.
My two Scotch friends have gone on leave to bra’ wee Ayr, and left me disconsolate, although they are both in ‘A’ Squadron, and I don't see much of them.
(The lecture has at last ended, 1½ hrs, so I'll finish this tonight - maybe...)
Well, Lulu, after the lecture I heard I'd been transferred from the Anti Tank Troop to the Mortar Troop****, and having seen the Troop Commander about my leave, feel more confident about the 16th - but remember it’s still not definite.
This mortar job appears cushy - driving - but not quite so cushy in action.
Well, Darling, I must close here with all my love,
always yours, Precious
your loving
Dicker
P.S. I mentioned our “engagement” to the old folks at home in my last letter. I haven't yet had a reply ... keep your chin up, Lulubelle..
*Royal Army Ordnance Corps – responsible for supplying weapons, ammunition and equipment to the Army.
**A Frances B. Young wrote a biography of Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke (an Elizabethan writer) but the origins of this reference are obscure.
***Dick’s original regiment (see Chotie Darling Part 1 ‘The Blue Cockade’) last heard of at Branksome in Poole.
****A Reconnaissance Regiment consisted of one HQ Squadron and three Reconnaissance Squadrons. Mortar Troop was one of the four Troops in HQ Squadron (with Signals, Armoured Tank and Admin) and used 6 x 3” mortars. Mortars are portable. Fixed to the ground they are used to fire small bombs in a slow high arc into the enemy at close range.
© Chotie Darling
On 8th and 10th September 43rd Recce were engaged in the 129 and 130 Infantry Brigade Exercise ‘Break In’ and on 15th and 17th in the Brigade Exercise ‘Break Out’. Unarmed combat cadres for N.C.O.s were held from 14th to 18th September and on 14th September Field officers attended a lecture on “Recent Operations in the Middle East”. The Commanding Officer attended an address by the new South East Army Commanders on 22nd September. 43rd Recce participated in a display for the visit of the Army Commander to the Field Firing range at Sandwich on 23rd September. A Regimental Exercise on 25th and 26th September “proved very valuable training in operating the regiment as a whole”. The exercise involved river crossings and cooking on vehicles with 4 man pack rations.
(From the War Diary of the 43rd Reconnaissance Regiment held by the Archive and Reference Library, the Tank Museum, Bovington, Dorset.)
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