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Susie-King

A veteran interview with

Susie King

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About Susie King

Credits

Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
Reviewed by:
David Mishan

Copyright:
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Home | Veterans | Susie King

A veteran interview with

Susie King

Susie-King

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https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/susie-king/

Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
King, Susie. A Veteran Interview with Susie King. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, n.d. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/susie-king/. Accessed 22 Mar. 2025.
APA Style:
King, S. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Susie King [Interview by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Retrieved March 22, 2025, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/susie-king/
Chicago Style:
King, Susie. n.d.. A Veteran Interview with Susie King. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee. Accessed March 22, 2025. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/susie-king/
Harvard Style:
King, S. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Susie King. [Interviewed by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/susie-king/ (Accessed: 22 March 2025)
Vancouver Style:
King, S. A Veteran Interview with Susie King [Internet]. Interview by M. Bisiker. Legasee; n.d. [cited 2025 Mar 22]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/susie-king/
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.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

Geoffrey Pidgeon

Geoffrey Pidgeon, recruited at only 14 by MI6, shares his extensive knowledge of wireless communications and intelligence gathering during WWII

In this engaging interview, Geoffrey Pidgeon explains how his father’s role in stores at Bletchley Park, combined with his teenage pastime of model building, led to a job offer with the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS). After securing his parents' permission to leave school, Geoffrey accepted the offer. Initially joining the Communication Section, later known as Section VIII, he began working in the workshops at Whaddon Hall. At just 14, he was the youngest member of the team—and potentially the youngest in the entire SIS. This marks the beginning of an extraordinary wartime experience. Geoffrey eventually went on to work for the newly created Mobile Construction Team, installing wireless equipment in vehicles and aircraft to assist with the interception of enemy communications. His professional experiences, alongside his personal life in Stony Stratford, placed him in a unique position to witness and participate in the highly confidential world of wartime intelligence gathering. This enables him to provide a deeply insightful account of how wireless communication and its rapid development played a crucial role in the success of Allied operations, as well as the integral nature of the ‘Y’ Service and the work at Bletchley Park.
Service:
Interviewed by:
Martyn Cox
An interview with

Douglas Hassall

A narrow escape from being executed after spending three and a half years in a Japanese prisoner of war camp.

Douglas Hassall shares how he narrowly escaped a death sentence after spending three and a half years as one of Japan’s prisoners of war during World War 2. Douglas accepted early on that escaping would be foolish as any escapees were executed; the camp being located in Vietnam also left the nearest allies 1100 miles away.  The Japanese employed beatings and other instantaneous punishments, something alien to a British soldier like Douglas, their neglectful medical care equally as shocking to him. Despite his horrible treatment Douglas highlights how incredibly lucky he was as the other camps had prisoners sleeping outside with no access to clean water. The few lenient guards allowed them to hold concerts and church services however over time the Japanese replaced them with cruel guards who murdered the prisoners’ pets.    Douglas got his first hint of freedom after a British interpreter secretly told him that allies were closing in, both of them unaware that Japan’s prisoners of war were all destined to die. Prison labour had halted and transportation of prisoners to the execution site had begun when the second atomic bomb fell forcing Japan to free everyone at the very last second.  Unfortunately Douglas’ release was bittersweet due to the plane transporting one of his friends back to England crashing killing everyone on board.   
Service:
Interviewed by:
Rebecca Fleckney