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A veteran interview with

John Pritchard

In Korea, John Pritchard was a craftsman with the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers [REME].

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About John Pritchard

Born into a military family, John begins by talking about his life as a boy during the Second World War. John left school at fourteen, moving from one job to the other until he joined the Army Apprentice School. Here, he continued his education while training as a mechanic. Afterwards, he underwent his basic training as a mechanic in Arborfield, Berkshire, before joining the Royal Electrical and Medical Engineers (REME) as a craftsman.

After a series of injections, John, now nineteen, was kitted out, ready to be sent to Korea, a place he had never heard of before. First, the 121 REME’s were sent to the Reinforcement Base Depot in Japan to train for the Korean terrain. However, John sustained a knee injury playing football with his comrades, causing him to spend three more weeks in Japan recovering. When reunited with his mates in Pusan, South Korea, John recalls his shock at seeing the ‘horrendous’ conditions that people lived in.

John’s first assignment was at an American airbase on Koji Island, repairing vehicles, later travelling to Seoul and the Yong Dong Po. During this time, his boss was Dutchie Holland, a man John speaks very fondly about, describing him as a father to the men. John talks about the charge sheets he used to receive, most often for carrying too many vehicles in at the same time, as well as recalling the harsh extremes of conditions in the workshop, both bitterly cold and boiling hot. In his time in Korea, John serviced lots of vehicles, including mobile bakeries, laundry vehicles, and k2 ambulances, as well as a Centurion tank that had been blown up, which was not a pleasant experience to work on.

John talks of what Christmas day was like as a soldier, the time off, the gift of rum, and the food eaten. After returning to England on HMT Dunera, John was told that he had earned himself some stripes, a moment he was incredibly proud of. Thank you for such a fascinating interview John.

Credits

Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
Reviewed by:
Anna Alcock
Transcribed by:
Gillian Cousins

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

If you would like a version of the transcript that has been transcribed manually by Gillian Cousins, please complete this form or email info@legasee.org.uk.

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Home | Veterans | John Pritchard

A veteran interview with

John Pritchard

John-Pritchard-PROMO.00_04_21_12.Still001-e1624973670722

In Korea, John Pritchard was a craftsman with the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers [REME].

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Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Pritchard, John. A Veteran Interview with John Pritchard. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, 26 Nov. 2017 https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/john-pritchard/. Accessed 23 Jan. 2026.
APA Style:
Pritchard, J. (2017, November 26). A Veteran Interview with John Pritchard [Interview by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Retrieved January 23, 2026, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/john-pritchard/
Chicago Style:
Pritchard, John. 2017. A Veteran Interview with John Pritchard. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, November 26. Accessed January 23, 2026. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/john-pritchard/
Harvard Style:
Pritchard, J. (2017). A Veteran Interview with John Pritchard. [Interviewed by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee, 26 November. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/john-pritchard/ (Accessed: 23 January 2026)
Vancouver Style:
Pritchard, J. A Veteran Interview with John Pritchard [Internet]. Interview by M. Bisiker. Legasee; 2017 Nov 26 [cited 2026 Jan 23]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/john-pritchard/
An interview with

George Barnes

A Korean War Wireless Operator with vivid memories of hardships and adventures around the Imjin River battle lines

George describes his WWII childhood in Cornwall, leaving school at 14 and working as an apprentice for the General Post Office (GPO). Conscripted into the army’s Royal Corps of Signals aged 19, he remembers training camp instructors’ hostility and his lasting camaraderie with trainees from all backgrounds. He recalls seeing other countries and nationalities for the first time during his 28-day journey to Korea, becoming emotional while reflecting upon his arrival in Pusan, where he saw refugees facing extreme poverty and the ravages of war. As a wireless operator, George drove reconnaissance vehicles around the Imjin River. At night, he scraped sleeping holes into hillsides or slept under the stars, always missing home but never frightened. He conveys the stench of war, the whistling of shell fire overhead, the suffocating heat of the dusty summer and the sometimes-fatal blistering winter cold. He reminisces fondly about the Korean nation and the feeling of returning home to Penzance. George’s depiction of wartime smells, sights and sounds show the enduring intensity of veterans’ memories even decades later. His interview highlights how, for some, deployment was the adventure of a lifetime that took them to otherwise inaccessible corners of the world.
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Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker