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A veteran interview with

Keith Nutter

The extremely modest Keith Nutter served in the Royal Norfolk Regiment in Korea.
He was mentioned in dispatches.

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About Keith Nutter

Leaving school at 15, Keith Nutter worked refurbishing shoe-making machinery before joining the army at 18, serving as a wireless operator in the Royal Norfolk Regiment. After basic training at Colchester, Keith applied for the Parachute Regiment. However, after sustaining a head injury during a motorbike accident, Keith was returned to his unit. Despite losing his opportunity to join the regiment he wanted, Keith remains grateful, as his service allowed him to visit a country that he only heard of for the first time upon joining the army.

Keith speaks on the leisurely voyage he and his comrades had out to Korea, his first impressions on arriving in Pusan, and the devastation witnessed as they took a train North to Britannia camp in Samichon Valley. Keith goes into some detail about his training and role as a wireless operator, the conditions of living and working in the signalling bunker, and the process of transporting and using the radio set. Keith also addresses how the role of communicator relies heavily on trusting your platoon as you were ‘deaf to the battle environment’ due to the headset and unable to open fire easily due to handling the microphone.

Keith talks of the listening, capture, and recce patrols he was involved in. One such patrol involved ambushing Chinese soldiers digging a trench on an unoccupied hill in the middle of the night. During this ambush, Keith, along with three other men, were responsible for collecting the wounded and stayed until first light to try and find the two men that remained unaccounted for. For his bravery displayed here, Keith was mentioned in dispatches; however, he speaks modestly, describing how he ‘was proud of it, but I just done me job … nothing brave.’ It was on this patrol that Keith lost a very close friend, Roy McDonald, killed by a Chinese mortar. Though he didn’t shed a tear at the time, once home, the devastation of the loss of his friend hit him hard.

Keith was interviewed for the Britannia magazine in which he spoke about the sympathy he had for the Chinese army as the British had ‘better weapons, better clothing, better food’. When asked how he feels all these years later about being a veteran, Keith proudly says that he ‘loved it in C Company’, he’s really glad he went, and has ‘never regretted it.’ It led him to meet lifelong friends, one of whom he revisited Korea with some years later.

Credits

Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
Reviewed by:
Anna Alcock
Transcribed by:
Alexandra Booth

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 Alexandra Booth, please complete this form or email info@legasee.org.uk.

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Home | Veterans | Keith Nutter

A veteran interview with

Keith Nutter

Keith-Nutter-Promos.00_07_11_14.Still001

The extremely modest Keith Nutter served in the Royal Norfolk Regiment in Korea.
He was mentioned in dispatches.

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Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Nutter, Keith. A Veteran Interview with Keith Nutter. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, 25 Oct. 2017 https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/keith-nutter/. Accessed 23 Apr. 2026.
APA Style:
Nutter, K. (2017, October 25). A Veteran Interview with Keith Nutter [Interview by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Retrieved April 23, 2026, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/keith-nutter/
Chicago Style:
Nutter, Keith. 2017. A Veteran Interview with Keith Nutter. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, October 25. Accessed April 23, 2026. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/keith-nutter/
Harvard Style:
Nutter, K. (2017). A Veteran Interview with Keith Nutter. [Interviewed by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee, 25 October. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/keith-nutter/ (Accessed: 23 April 2026)
Vancouver Style:
Nutter, K. A Veteran Interview with Keith Nutter [Internet]. Interview by M. Bisiker. Legasee; 2017 Oct 25 [cited 2026 Apr 23]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/keith-nutter/
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