Home | Veterans | Norman Chadwick
Norman-Chadwick

A veteran interview with

Norman Chadwick

Video Coming Soon

About Norman Chadwick

Credits

Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker

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 | Norman Chadwick

A veteran interview with

Norman Chadwick

Norman-Chadwick

Related topics & talking points

Keep on watching

More veteran stories...

Share this interview on:

https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/norman-chadwick/

Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Chadwick, Norman. A Veteran Interview with Norman Chadwick. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, 18 Nov. 2014 https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/norman-chadwick/. Accessed 23 May. 2025.
APA Style:
Chadwick, N. (2014, November 18). A Veteran Interview with Norman Chadwick [Interview by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Retrieved May 23, 2025, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/norman-chadwick/
Chicago Style:
Chadwick, Norman. 2014. A Veteran Interview with Norman Chadwick. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, November 18. Accessed May 23, 2025. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/norman-chadwick/
Harvard Style:
Chadwick, N. (2014). A Veteran Interview with Norman Chadwick. [Interviewed by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee, 18 November. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/norman-chadwick/ (Accessed: 23 May 2025)
Vancouver Style:
Chadwick, N. A Veteran Interview with Norman Chadwick [Internet]. Interview by M. Bisiker. Legasee; 2014 Nov 18 [cited 2025 May 23]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/norman-chadwick/
An interview with

Marge Arbury

Marge Arbury's experience in deciphering Nazi secrets as a Y Service operative during World War II.

Marge Arbury was born in Cobham and at 19 years old she joined up to serve her country.  She completed three weeks of initial training at a training camp in Guildford, where she found out she was very good at Morse code, and because of this was selected to be a wireless operator. She was sent to the Isle of Man to be a Y operator. When she arrived she was required to sign the Official Secrets Act, Marge recalls that one person was sent home, as she had a German grandmother so wouldn’t be eligible for the role. She remembers the six months on the Isle of Man, learning how to understand Morse code, getting her ready for her new role as a wireless operator. In October 1943, she was sent to Harrogate, Forestmore, where she started to decipher German enigma messages. Marge never expected that she would be a spy when she first joined up, she thought she would be driving lorries! Her role as a wireless operator involved going through transmissions trying to find hidden Morse code messages.  She was responsible for covering messages coming out of Yugoslavia, from the German Army, Navy, and the Gestapo. All of the messages were passed on by motorbike to Station X, also known as Bletchley park. Whilst stationed in Harrogate, due to the secrecy of the role, people thought she wasn’t contributing anything, and townspeople didn’t treat her well. This couldn’t be further from the actual truth and the important work she was working. Marge stayed with the Y service until the very end of the war and was eventually demobbed in October 1946.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Kevin Roberts

Kevin discusses his 36-year long career and the power of music to support healing and reach out to diverse communities

After taking up the trombone at a young age, Kevin went on to play within the band movement. It was here that he was influenced by a teacher who was an ex-Scots Guards bandsman, this experience sharpened his enthusiasm into what would eventually become his life-long career and passion. In 1982 Kevin enlisted in the Parachute Regiment at age 16. Kevin’s army career has spanned 36 years at the time of this interview, during which he has served in Kenya, Northern Ireland, Iraq and Kuwait, Jordan and Germany to name a few. He describes his spiritual home as Kneller Hall where he was able to focus and hone his musical skills, eventually becoming a musical director. His tours of duty have a common theme, that of community service, care, and compassion offered to his colleagues in the army and to the communities in the countries they were based in. This is particularly reflected in his discussion of the role the band played in Northern Ireland and in Iraq, offering sensitive and compassionate interventions in incredibly difficult circumstances to people who were often traumatised by war and conflict. He is incredibly proud of what they have been able to achieve.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

Stephen Jackson

Surviving Aden’s volatile streets and Belfast’s Troubles, the emotional journey of a Northumberland Fusilier

Stephen Jackson offers a powerful and emotional account of his time with the Northumberland Fusiliers during the Aden Emergency. Joining the army straight out of school at 15, Stephen quickly found himself posted to Germany as a company clerk, where his early days were marked by camaraderie, tough men, and even a memorable ski trip. However, everything changed when he was deployed to Aden in 1966. The scorching heat hit him first, followed by the tense atmosphere as he arrived at camp in a guarded truck. As a company clerk, his duties were largely administrative, but when out in the field, the situation could be terrifying. Stationed in the volatile Crater district, the role of the Fusiliers was to try and keep the peace between the NLF and FLOSY using foot patrols and roadblocks. One of his most harrowing memories is of the day the local police mutinied, resulting in the loss of several close comrades. After Aden, Stephen was posted to Belfast during the Troubles, completing four tours before finishing his service in Gibraltar. Reflecting on his experiences, he shares how the trauma from Aden has stayed with him, leading to PTSD. Despite the hardships, Stephen’s story is one of courage and resilience.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker