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Dorothy Butler - Korean War - Navy

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Published on 13 January 2010

My name is Dorothy Butler. My maiden name was Owen. I was on continuous naval duty with the WRENS during the Korean combat. And I was stationed in Cornwallis and I was stationed in Stadacona in Halifax and I was at Naden on training and I was in Shearwater where I finished my time. While I was on inquiry desk at Statacona Hospital, was when they had a steam pipe burst in the dockyard, and two men were hit with the pressure of the steam. One man died at the time. The other man survived and was taken to Stadacona Hospital. And while I was …they took me up to see him, which was horrendous, but I also had to take his wife to the padre and on the way over she said to me, “Will he be able to see?” He lived for eight hours that way and finally passed away. But I said to her, I didn’t know what to say to her, you know…said anything to her, none of the nurses had mentioned anything. And I thought she should be prepared for the worst, so this was handled there.

At Shearwater, I was the only WREN in the hospital there, and it was my duty to go out on, if a WREN was out on a job somewhere out in the boondocks and took sick, they would fly me out in a helicopter to pick her up and bring her back. I also delivered a baby for someone, one of the servicemen’s/the officer’s wives, which shocked me and made be decide I didn’t want to have any children. But I changed my mind. But at Naden, we were trained to take the place of a doctor the same as the men were trained because when they were on ships, there wasn’t a doctor available. They had to be able to read the symptoms and act on them and even perform minor operations if necessary. So we were trained to take their place when they left for sea. That was our main object.

One night while I was at Shearwater, I was on nights, and there were two of us on duty, and the other petty officer was having his stand-down time, he was asleep, and I heard the backdoor open and I thought it was the ambulance driver, and I looked up from sitting in the office and here was this kid standing there with blood from his hairline right down to his waistline bleeding. He ended up going through the windshield and he walked all the way from the Eastern Passage Road up into the hospital. I had to get my PO up out of bed and we ended up stitching him, I don’t know, I can’t remember how many stitches we put in his face. But thank God he was left with hardly any scarring. But these were things that you did, and you went ahead and did them. You didn’t think twice.

Dorothy Butler on the Digital Archive

 



Dorothy Butler - Korean War - Navy

January 13, 2010 | By Butler | “At Shearwater, I was the only WREN in the hospital there, and it was my duty to go out on, if a WREN was out on a job somewhere out in the boondocks and took sick, they would fly me out in a helicopter to pick her up and bring her back. I also delivered a baby for someone, one of the servicemen’s/the officer’s wives, which shocked me and made be decide I didn’t want to have any children. But I changed my mind.”

Bud Bernston - Canadian Forces - Air Force

January 13, 2010 | By Bernston | “ I was raised in a small farm community out in Saskatchewan, and back in about 1955, I noticed an advertisement that said, "Join the Air Force, become a pilot, go to university and get paid fifty dollars a month, all at the same time…"

Les Peate - Korean War - Army

January 13, 2010 | By Peate | “We lived in holes in the ground which we dug ourselves, called hootches, that were very cold in winter. They were infested with lice, with rats, with bugs, and they were usually waterlogged in the bottom.”

Margaret Haliburton - Second World War - Navy

January 13, 2010 | By Haliburton | “...I always say, I think I'm the only girl whose mother told her to join up, and that wasn't because she wanted to get rid of me, but she was a very adventurous woman….She said to me one day that she just didn't understand what was the matter with her daughter; that if she'd had a chance, she would have joined up the very first day.”

Val Rimer - Second World War - Army

January 13, 2010 | By Rimer | “… the next day, we grouped together after the battle to assess the damages and regrouping was a mistake. A German spotter nearby with wireless directed fire on us. The troop I was in of three tanks, were destroyed. I am the only one alive.”