The Trip of a Lifetime, Combined Ops-Related in 2014
London Was Actually a Detour, Lost-Passport-Related
Introduction:
The trip to Scotland was well-planned and my first days in Irvine were a treat. I walked over some of the same beaches and sat in some of the same pubs that my father had during WWII.
I didn't see any Nissan or Quonset huts that housed members of RCNVR and Combined Operations when they were training to handle landing crafts south of Irvine, toward Troon. But I did see the water and shore that was abuzz with practice operations during the months preceding the Dieppe Raid, the invasions of North Africa, Sicily and Italy, and more.
Before I headed to Inveraray and Edinburgh I had to make an unscheduled detour to London, however, in order to deal with (what I thought was) a stolen or lost passport. Within five minutes of unpacking at my bed and breakfast, my missing passport tumbled onto my bed from deep within my backpack and my worries were over. I was duly informed at Government House that my passport was still valid so I skipped down the street to a coffeeshop and made exciting plans re the city of London.
I visited my great-aunt's neighbourhood and sampled wares at pubs my father had mentioned in memoirs. I walked for hours, loving every minute, snapped 100s of photos (Buckingham Palace, Parliament Square, shiny beer taps, on and on, and visited the Imperial War Museum to donate a copy of my father's memoirs and newspaper columns re his time in Combined Operations.
Below are a few photos of my trip to the Imperial War Museum (IWM):
Please link to Photographs re Combined Operations and "The Spit" at Comox, Vancouver Island, BC for more information and photographs re Canadians in Combined Operations.
Unattributed Photos GH
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