Home | Veterans | Bernard Cohen
BERNARD-COHEN

A veteran interview with

Bernard Cohen

Bernard Cohen remembers life on board the HMS Glory during his six month service in Korea.

Video Coming Soon

Bringing military history to life

Help us tell this veteran's story!

About Bernard Cohen

Bernard Cohen tells a fascinating account of his time as a Naval Airman during the Korean War. He began his initial training in Corsham, Wiltshire at the naval establishment, HMS Arthur. Following this, he served aboard HMS Illustrious for his Seamanship training and at HMS Gannet in Northern Ireland, he learned Firefighting and Air Traffic Control.

Eventually, he was posted to serve aboard HMS Glory, spending much time in the Mediterranean before being deployed to Korea where he joined the war. As a member of the fly-deck party, his main responsibilities consisted of storing and positioning aircrafts of the airborne crew who came from offshore as well as helping them with landing and lifting off safely from the carrier.

He has upsetting memories of the airmen who died in crashes, remembering how he had given each of them a thumbs up before flying only to never see them again.

The ship was not immune to hazardous weather conditions and it was during his service when Typhoon Marge struck. Despite this issue, Bernard was fortunate to be with the first commission during the summer period when the storm was less severe compared to what the second and third commissions had to endure who arrived during the winter when conditions had worsened.

Throughout his service in the war, Bernard never stepped ashore in any of the Korean harbours or port cities. He revisited Korea many years later when veterans of the war were invited to the country annually. He recalls the admiration and generosity of the Korean people, treating them like heroes for helping them in their time of need.

Bernard’s interview captures the bravery and sacrifice of those in the Navy who helped the Korean people, ensuring a better future for them and establishing a lasting bond for future generations.

Credits


Reviewed by:
Matt Pitt

Copyright:
All video content, web site design, graphics, images (including submitted content), text, the selection and arrangement thereof, underlying source code, software and all other material on this Web site are the copyright of Legasee Educational Trust, and its affiliates, or their content and technology providers. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Any use of materials on this Web site – including reproduction for purposes other than those noted above, modification, distribution, or republication – without the prior written permission of Legasee Educational Trust is strictly prohibited.

Home | Veterans | Bernard Cohen

A veteran interview with

Bernard Cohen

BERNARD-COHEN

Bernard Cohen remembers life on board the HMS Glory during his six month service in Korea.

Related topics & talking points

Keep on watching

More veteran stories...

Share this interview on:

https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/bernard-cohen/

Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Cohen, Bernard. A Veteran Interview with Bernard Cohen. Interview by Unknown. Legasee, n.d. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/bernard-cohen/. Accessed 22 Mar. 2025.
APA Style:
Cohen, B. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Bernard Cohen [Interview by Unknown]. Legasee. Retrieved March 22, 2025, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/bernard-cohen/
Chicago Style:
Cohen, Bernard. n.d.. A Veteran Interview with Bernard Cohen. Interview by Unknown. Legasee. Accessed March 22, 2025. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/bernard-cohen/
Harvard Style:
Cohen, B. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Bernard Cohen. [Interviewed by Unknown]. Legasee. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/bernard-cohen/ (Accessed: 22 March 2025)
Vancouver Style:
Cohen, B. A Veteran Interview with Bernard Cohen [Internet]. Interview by Unknown. Legasee; n.d. [cited 2025 Mar 22]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/bernard-cohen/
An interview with

Alec Pulfer

Signalman Alec Pulfer's Journey from the Battle for Norway to joining the Mediterranean fleet.

Alec Victor Ashcroft Pulfer was conscripted into the Royal Navy in August 1939, just before World War II. Despite his reluctance to join the Royal Navy, he decided to see the war through. After four months of signalman training, he joined HMS Javelin in Southend on Sea. He struggled with Morse code but eventually mastered it, finding Morse code and semaphore crucial for his daily duties. In the Battle for Norway, Alec and his crew faced a disaster when their transport ship was torpedoed by the Germans and sank, leaving them unable to save anyone while they hunted the attacking submarine. They retreated to Alesund, where German paratroopers attacked, but HMS Javelin managed to return to England. Unfortunately, HMS Glorious and other ships were not as fortunate. Alec then joined HMS Woolwich, heading to the Mediterranean fleet. After two years in the Mediterranean, HMS Woolwich survived despite losing most of its fleet. Alec returned home for signals training before heading back to the Middle East, where he fought in the Greek civil war, his worst experience. He remembers seeing people die, describing it as very grim, but it was something he got used to. But he never got used to seeing civilians dying, that was a common occurrence in Greece, as the Germans had mined everywhere before they left. Alec was tasked with safely routing ships in and out of Greece. Eventually, the war ended and Alec returned home and was demobbed (released from service).
An interview with

Austin Byrne

A Royal Navy gunner WW2 veteran, who, against the odds, survived the sinking of the SS Induna in Arctic waters.

Austin Byrne relates the harrowing account of his ordeal on the SS Induna, a defensively equipped merchant ship sunk by a German submarine in hostile waters. Joining the navy to see the world at nineteen, he recalls his initial exciting experiences on the ship, learning the ropes, navigating mines, and enduring storms. However, this is quickly cut short when a torpedo hits the Induna's stern and Austin’s account of the ships’s last moments are rivetingly well told. He recounts the subsequent excruciating, and very long, four days spent adrift on a small, exposed lifeboat with his remaining shipmates, as fears and emotions run high in fatal conditions. When the lifeboat is finally picked up by a Russian minesweeper Austin is taken to a Russian hospital, his memories of which are filled with both grief and humour.  Within only a couple of weeks of his return to the UK, however, Austin was back on the sea again and just over a year later, he was on a ship bound for Russia. Austin’s story is not one that is easily forgotten and is reflective of the remarkable bravery and resilience of many a navy veteran during WW2.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

William Sheppard

A WWII gunner shares a detailed and engaging account of his service on the mine sweeper HMS Onyx.

After testing out the army and the air force as a cadet, William Sheppard settled on a career in the navy and completed his training at HMS Collingwood. After passing out, he joined HMS Onyx in 1943 and remained with the same ship until 1949. William talks about his duties aboard the Onyx, remembering the good fortune that excused him from many of the more tedious jobs to be done, and recalls the constant challenge to keep warm faced by the crew as they sailed the Arctic seas. His story includes details of the sweeps commonly used by the Onyx when trying to detect mines, and he tells of the horrors he encountered when the ship arrived in the English Channel ahead of the Normandy landings. William also recalls catching sight of a ship full of German maidens en route back to harbour, wryly commenting on the lack of any similar provision within the British navy.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker