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THE BATTLE FOR HILL 60
Pte
Len
Dawe was another Royal Sussex man
on Hill 60 that night. He was Company runner to
Maj. K.L.Callendar, M.C. The Commanding Officer. Len recalls spending the
night up and down to the platoon commanders to report back to the Major who
maintained his position in his trench.
In August 1999, Len wrote "After the first attack went in and things were getting too hot we had to withdraw. This was done by shouting and a whistle was blown. The wounded and dead were being brought in and Sergeants were reporting to the Company Commander. We
had 15 minutes to wait and then bombers were going to strafe the hill again. My
mate Gundry was unaccounted for so I had to go out to find him! Which I did, he
was in a shell hole wounded in the thigh. We got back slowly after a nightmare
of dodging bullets. Then, with another chap I found Lt. Brewster. He was hiding
in a clump of bamboo. He said “Leave me and look for the others” but we said
come quickly as another bombardment is due any moment. We put him on a stretcher
and took him to the M.O. When we took him off the stretcher it was -
well, he
had lost a lot of blood, he must have been badly hit. Then the bombardment
started again and as I went to the hill all the Japs were blown out of the
bunkers. Yes, we did have smoke grenades because I passed the body of
Pte. Bright and he had them strapped to his waist. I fancy one had been hit as
there was smoke about. He was on the right hand side of the hill, the same as
Dennis. I
digress. Before going to the hill the Coy. Commander was I think talking to
another Major and I and another chap were burying the two Sgts. Allen and
Crunden, then an officer took a compass bearing of the graves for the Graves
Registration chaps. On
the top of the hill again, some Indian Sepoys were collecting the dead Japs and
laying them out to be counted. It was breakfast time so we sat down and had our
biscuits as another patrol were chasing any stragglers off the hill. As we were
there, having a fag I said to the chaps “I think I saw that Jap move.” They
laughed but at the same time he got up and ran like hell down the hill.
Everybody began shooting. I think he got to the jungle but was later found dead. Lt.
Reynolds account. The chap he describes was, I’m pretty certain Pte. Fred
Stoneham. Wire specs, squint in his eye, and who later had an affair with a Jap.
The Japs had got into our perimeter one night and one Jap fell in Stoneham’s
trench and pulled a grenade out. Fred promptly threw the Jap on the exploding
grenade. And Fred got away with a finger missing! ©Len
Dawe. The wounded Lt., was B.Brewster of ‘D’ Coy and the one killed by the shell by Lt. P. Dunford of ‘C’ Coy. Both are buried in Taukkyan Cemetery, as is Pte Bright. |
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