Bridlington
Title
Bridlington
Description
Tells story of comrade who got drunk on pub crawl and fell into an emergency static water tank on his way back to camp and resulting events.
Coverage
Language
Format
One page printed documents
Publisher
Rights
This content is available under a CC BY-NC 4.0 International license (Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0). It has been published ‘as is’ and may contain inaccuracies or culturally inappropriate references that do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the University of Lincoln or the International Bomber Command Centre. For more information, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ and https://ibccdigitalarchive.lincoln.ac.uk/omeka/legal.
Contributor
Identifier
MPotterPL1878961-150914-20
Transcription
[underlined]Bridlington[/underlined]
At Bridlington, one of our squad went pub crawling, having received a
cash gift from a relative. He overdid the imbibing a little and somehow
managed to fall into the emergency static water tank on his way back to
camp.
He was rescued by a couple of Waafs and delivered to the camp
guardhouse.
Normally he would have ended up in a cell and been put on a charge, but
the SP.s wanted nothing to do with him and refused entry to the
guardhouse as he stank to high heaven with the putrid water of the E.W.S.
We took him to the showers, where we stripped him and left him sitting
on the floor under a shower and his clothes beneath another. He came
into the billet about an hour later, still wet and minus his clothes. One of
the chaps went for the clothes, which were still under the shower. Both
showers were still on.
Next morning he had to wear his best blue on parade and the Sergeant
Instructor, having heard the tale, decided to put us over the assault course.
The poor bod was up most of the night sorting his uniforms out.
By the way he had no memory of falling into the E. W. S and thought he
had fallen into the North Sea.
The next morning he was put on kitchen fatigues for being so scruffy and
no shine on his boots.
At Bridlington, one of our squad went pub crawling, having received a
cash gift from a relative. He overdid the imbibing a little and somehow
managed to fall into the emergency static water tank on his way back to
camp.
He was rescued by a couple of Waafs and delivered to the camp
guardhouse.
Normally he would have ended up in a cell and been put on a charge, but
the SP.s wanted nothing to do with him and refused entry to the
guardhouse as he stank to high heaven with the putrid water of the E.W.S.
We took him to the showers, where we stripped him and left him sitting
on the floor under a shower and his clothes beneath another. He came
into the billet about an hour later, still wet and minus his clothes. One of
the chaps went for the clothes, which were still under the shower. Both
showers were still on.
Next morning he had to wear his best blue on parade and the Sergeant
Instructor, having heard the tale, decided to put us over the assault course.
The poor bod was up most of the night sorting his uniforms out.
By the way he had no memory of falling into the E. W. S and thought he
had fallen into the North Sea.
The next morning he was put on kitchen fatigues for being so scruffy and
no shine on his boots.
Collection
Citation
“Bridlington,” IBCC Digital Archive, accessed January 14, 2025, https://ibccdigitalarchive.lincoln.ac.uk/omeka/collections/document/30896.
Item Relations
This item has no relations.