2/Lt Williams RK
61st Recce Regt
RAC
Home Forces
Saturday 1st April
Chotie Darling,
Just received your letters and enclosed, for which very many thanks, Darling.
Arrived back safely from Scotland on Wednesday last and have been up to my eyes in work ever since. Things are pretty hectic at the moment.
You’re quite right about the sopranos – I’m quite enamoured with several – Maria Cancellia, Rosa Poncelle* etc, though unfortunately they’re still in Italy I believe.
I shall be able to see you on your leave – at least I hope so. Prepare for an FFI – you naughty girl.
I had to go to Leicester yesterday to take some vehicles there and managed to see Diller for some few minutes. Unhappily it took me nearly an hour to find her, and I was pretty pushed for time. However, I chased around on a motor bike and eventually found her. Brinner spent last weekend there on a 48 from OCTU and had quite a good time I believe.
I’ve just had a break for lunch. I had a pretty cushy time in Scotland. There was a singular lack of any show of organisation with the result that they didn’t really know we were there for three days or so. I had one day in Glasgow on the weekend. No much of a town – yet the Scots refer to it as the ‘Second City of the Empire’.
There was every amenity to be found locally – skating, swimming, golf etc, so I didn’t need to travel abroad. The only snag with the whole place was that all the pubs shut at 8.30 in the evening and very few opened at all on Sundays. We could drink in the mess until 11.30 though, so things were not too bad.
(I’m just going to fight for the coffee – Got it…)
The Lieutenant I went to Glasgow with was once in a mixed AA Battery** – gave me all the dope. He said he had to chuck it as every time he choked off*** some poor girl she burst into tears, which used to shake him. He was a bit crazy anyhow.
Geoff Winzer’s sorting out kit and holding a young auction sale this afternoon so I’m going round to buy it all up (perhaps..)
You evaded my reference to baritones – I think you’ve got a couple teed up somewhere in Bath.
Incidentally Eric and I always used to drink at the ‘Christopher’ which is just opposite the Abbey. It used to be quite a place. That was where, on one memorable occassion I called for two pints and we found we had only got sevenpence between us. Happy days ….
And please, Chotie, no more presents. You really can’t do it.
All my love, Darling
Dicker
*Probably Rosa Ponselle, an American soprano
**The mixed (male and female) anti-aircraft batteries had a quite scandalous reputation in some quarters. The women serving alongside men had much more freedom to socialise with the opposite sex than other military units for women. (See also The History of the ATS.)
***’choke off’ - bring the relationship to an end
****The Christopher's Inn is now a backpackers’ hostel.
© Chotie Darling
Were these the women who defended Bristol?
1st April 1944 – Salween offensive by China attacking the Japanese army in Yunnan Province which lies on the NE border of Burma (Myanmar). They eventually reached Burma on 22nd January 1945. (From World War II database.)
The US Air Force accidentally bomb Schaffhausen in northernmost Switzerland and offer $1million in reparations. (From WW2-net Timelines.)
3rd April 1944 – Germany’s huge battleship, the Tirpitz, is attacked and damaged in Operation Tungsten, a bombing raid by the Royal Navy’s Fleet Air Arm in Alten Fjord in Norway. (From Chronology of World War II http://www.onwar.com/chrono/1944/apr44/f03apr44.htm.)
With Hungary now occupied by the German army the US Army Air Force and the RAF bomb the capital Budapest.
4th April 1944 – De Gaulle becomes head of the Free French forces in place of Giraud (from Chronology of World War II).
The US Army Air Force bombs Bucharest, the capital of Romania (from WW2-net Timelines).
5th April 1944 – Siegfried Lederer, a Jewish inmate of the concentration camp and killing centre at Auschwitz-Birkenau escapes to Czechoslovakia. Two days later Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzel also escape successfully. They write a report, providing some of the first reliable eyewitness accounts of the camp, which is published worldwide from Switzerland in June 1944. (See United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.)
Britain closes the telephone service to Ireland (a neutral country in World War 2) and stops newspaper distribution to there and Gibraltar. (From Chronology of World War II.)
6th April 1944 – the Japanese lay siege to Kohima, about 60 miles north of Imphal, a supply depot at the summit of a pass offering the Japanese their best route from Burma into India. The hill-station was bravely defended by a small force of Indian and British troops. Although the siege was relieved by 15th April, fierce fighting at Kohima continued until the end of May when the starving Japanese withdrew. The 2nd Division Memorial at Kohima bears the famous epitaph
"When You Go Home, Tell Them Of Us And Say,
For Their Tomorrow, We Gave Our Today".
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