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Wendy-Hooton

A veteran interview with

Wendy Hooton

Wendy Hooton was a communications centre operator for the WRAC.

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About Wendy Hooton

At only seventeen years old Wendy Joined the WRAC in 1972. Driven by her desire to travel, she joined the army as a communications operator and her interview provides a fascinating insight into the processes, and complications, of being a young woman in a military environment.

Wendy recalls the strict routines at Guildford and the excitement of her passing out parade following the first six weeks of training. In her specialised training, Wendy discusses the complexity of the communications machinery and the development of technologies throughout her time as an operator. Beginning with T-100s, Wendy describes the transition into T-15 Telex machines in the late 1970s.

Reflecting on the WRAC Wendy speaks fondly of her travels to Rheindahlen, Hong Kong, Australia, Cyprus and later Edinburgh. During this time she faced constant IRA threats, Cold War tensions and feelings of discontent that erupted with the onset of the Falklands. She speaks passionately on the importance of the WRAC as an emerging space for women to push beyond their societal expectations during a period of great change.

 

Credits

Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
Reviewed by:
Evie Painter
Transcribed by:
Leon Graham

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 Leon Graham, please complete this form or email info@legasee.org.uk.

Copyright:
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Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Hooton, Wendy. A Veteran Interview with Wendy Hooton. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, 17 Apr. 2024 https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/wendy-hooton/. Accessed 21 Apr. 2026.
APA Style:
Hooton, W. (2024, April 17). A Veteran Interview with Wendy Hooton [Interview by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Retrieved April 21, 2026, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/wendy-hooton/
Chicago Style:
Hooton, Wendy. 2024. A Veteran Interview with Wendy Hooton. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, April 17. Accessed April 21, 2026. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/wendy-hooton/
Harvard Style:
Hooton, W. (2024). A Veteran Interview with Wendy Hooton. [Interviewed by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee, 17 April. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/wendy-hooton/ (Accessed: 21 April 2026)
Vancouver Style:
Hooton, W. A Veteran Interview with Wendy Hooton [Internet]. Interview by M. Bisiker. Legasee; 2024 Apr 17 [cited 2026 Apr 21]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/wendy-hooton/
An interview with

Rex Sheppard

From a parochial fisherman to the front line in Korea, Rex recounts his transformative experience of National Service

Rex shares his transformative experience of national service, going from a 'Jack the lad' fisherman in Ipswich, to Section Commander in Korea, all for a boy of 18 who had never left his home ground.

Rex describes traveling on The Windrush from Southampton to 'The Territories', 3 miles from Hiroshima to complete increasingly arduous military training run by Colonel Lonsdale designed to transform the men into “killing machines”.

From here the men were ½ a mile away from the Chinese military camps, where they could, on a clear day, see their enemy training to fight against them.

As soon as he turned 19, Rex was sent to Uijeongbu, to be quickly immersed in front line duty. He was soon to become a section commander, responsible for running patrols in the challenging landscape of paddy fields and mountains, at times coming within 150 yards of the North Korean and Chinese front line.

Rex recounts his experiences of living with Siberian winds, psychological warfare, 'Hill 335' and the brutality and carnage of fighting on 'The Hook', where death was only a whistle away. His story is one of resilience and comradeship.

Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

Peter Lee

Peter avoided being sent back to base for a mundane duty and instead was assigned to SOE.

Peter Lee was at the War Office when his superior tried to have him posted elsewhere but he was able to join Special Operation Executive (SOE). Initially he was at SOE HQ in London, in charge of field agent’s security. After this he was posted to north Africa and later Italy, where he worked with secret agents recruited from First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY). He also supervised two Russian agents who were parachuted into German occupied Italy. Peter was responsible for the training many of the FANY’s and ensuring the secrecy of their missions. One of these operations was the destruction of a huge steel press used to make German tanks. It was realised at the time that many agents sent out would never return and this unnerved some of the trainers. He regards the war as the most interesting time of his life and was in some ways sorry when it ended.