Home | Veterans | Jack Webb
Jack-Webb

A veteran interview with

Jack Webb

For an unlucky man, I’ve had an awful lot of good luck’ – Jack Webb tells us how he escaped the war unscathed..

Video Coming Soon

Bringing military history to life

Help us tell this veteran's story!

About Jack Webb

In 1942, Jack Webb joined the 70th young solider battalion Essex regiment, when this disbanded in 1943, he went to the 2nd 4th battalion Essex regiment, before finally being press-ganged into the 5th Berkshire regiment as preparations for the Normandy invasion began.

Jack details his involvement in the D-Day invasion; starting with the beach training in Scotland and ending with a firsthand account of landing on Juno beach (Bernieres-Sur-Mer) alongside the 8th Canadian assault troop.

After successfully landing, Jack worked as part of a “dump company”, a regiment tasked with unloading resources to keep troops well supplied. He described the work as valuable, but physically and emotionally demanding.

Jack worked at Bernieres until August 1944; he was then transferred to the 5th Wiltshire Battalion and sent to Vernon, where he was taken as a Prisoner of War and transported to Limburg, he stayed there until he was rescued the following April.

Jack considers himself incredibly fortunate to have returned home unscathed “for an unlucky man, I had an awful lot of luck”.

Following the war Jack joined the Normandy Veterans Association and has returned to France regularly to visit the graves of his old troop members.

Credits


Reviewed by:
Ed Thorns

Transcripts:
Please note that transcripts and closed captions in the video player are automatically generated by Vimeo.

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 | Jack Webb

A veteran interview with

Jack Webb

Jack-Webb

For an unlucky man, I’ve had an awful lot of good luck’ – Jack Webb tells us how he escaped the war unscathed..

Related topics & talking points

Keep on watching

More veteran stories...

Share this interview on:

https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jack-webb/

Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Webb, Jack. A Veteran Interview with Jack Webb. Interview by Unknown. Legasee, n.d. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jack-webb/. Accessed 17 Nov. 2025.
APA Style:
Webb, J. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Jack Webb [Interview by Unknown]. Legasee. Retrieved November 17, 2025, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jack-webb/
Chicago Style:
Webb, Jack. n.d.. A Veteran Interview with Jack Webb. Interview by Unknown. Legasee. Accessed November 17, 2025. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jack-webb/
Harvard Style:
Webb, J. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Jack Webb. [Interviewed by Unknown]. Legasee. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jack-webb/ (Accessed: 17 November 2025)
Vancouver Style:
Webb, J. A Veteran Interview with Jack Webb [Internet]. Interview by Unknown. Legasee; n.d. [cited 2025 Nov 17]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/jack-webb/
An interview with

Gordon Turner

Gordon describes his distinguished musical career throughout his many years in the army.

Gordon began learning to play the cornet at aged 10, while many of his friends were out playing football. After leaving school, he successfully applied to the Royal Engineers at Chatham at aged 14 and was subsequently accepted as a pupil at Kneller Hall despite being only 14 years old. After 18 months, he succeeded in his exams and returned to Chatham. While there, he was supported to continue his education and studied Music at Trinity College. In 1956, he was accepted back at Kneller Hall, although considered too young for a studentship, but put in for the 6-month exams where he came top of his group. He subsequently took on a bandmaster roll at aged 25, becoming the youngest in the army to achieve this. Gordon goes on to describe his time as bandmaster and the rich variety of opportunities that came his way, including serving in Germany. Ultimately, Gordon became Professor of Band Arranging, Harmony and History Music at Kneller Hall. In the last months of his career he met Princess Anne, who was then Colonel in Chief of his regiment. She was instrumental in organising a celebration of his work in London before he retired.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
Frame grab of a veteran of the AGC being interviewed
An interview with

Hannah Campbell

An Army corporal’s inspirational story of soldering, motherhood, devastating injury and the long road to recovery.

Corporal Hannah Campbell joined the armed forces in May 2002, working first with Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps before discovering a strong preference for soldiering and transferring to the Adjutant General’s Corps. In 2007, Hannah and her partner received separate postings: hers to Iraq and his to Afghanistan. As they had a daughter together, they deemed Iraq the safer of the two options so Hannah left for Basra, but quickly realised it wasn’t going to be an easy environment to survive. Hannah talks about her work on base amidst the constant mortar fire, recalling a number of near misses before sharing a vivid and horrifying account of the day she suffered a direct hit. She goes on to talk candidly about her return to England and her struggles with PTSD, as well as the long and difficult road to accepting the need for her leg to be amputated; after which she was finally able to move on with her life thanks to the intensive and remarkable rehab she received at Headley Court.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

John Bowler

John Bowler was a 19-year old officer when he joined the Korean war. He gives an in-depth account of front-line fighting on the "Hook" ridge, Hill 355 and intense day and night-time raids and patrols. John also recounts how he won the Military Cross for his incredible bravery.

John was drafted into the Army and, upon becoming a commissioned officer in the Royal Welsh Regiment, chose Jamaica as his dream destination. Fate chose Folkstone's barracks for John instead. He explains how his strong relationship with his platoon commander, rugby and the British weather - but not its terrain - prepared them for Korea. John then fondly recounts travelling and being posted to Hong Kong in 1951, aged 19, and explains how "Tuffy" the goat mascot deeply affected Welsh servicemen's morale! Most men had never left Wales, so they brought Welsh hymns with them as they landed in Pusan. John recalls acclimatising to a country and people devastated by war. Posted on the "Hook" ridge frontline, John gives a colourful depiction of the British defensive positions and cooking with petrol. He recalls his first (very) close enemy contact and the Chinese army's professionalism. John fought fiercely on Hill 169. He explains what night-time fighting was like and how his company fought their way out of a Chinese encirclement. John poignantly reflects on how the love for his men often trumped his fear of death. John shares a heart-racing encounter with a numerically superior enemy and how British artillery helped them escape into no man's land. John explains how the unreliable Sten gun hindered their retreat and how an act of god saved his men. On another dreaded daylight patrol, John shares a heart-breaking memory of how a well-placed mortar killed two of his men. There were always two other enemies, the cold weather and hills, and John explains how they were fought. John's platoon was then posted to Hill 355. John recalls a night-time raid behind enemy lines and how his men kept their discipline under unimaginable terror, and how he won the Military cross. He also speaks of keeping his humanity during war. Korea gave John clarity on life's important things and a steadfast resilience to its challenges. He also got nightmares and a lifelong grief for his fallen men. John is testament to the British soldier's camaraderie, honesty and resilience in the face of unimaginable challenges.
Photo Gallery icon 5 Photos
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker