The Battle of the Scheldt: Remembering Canada’s hard-won victory 75 years later
OTTAWA — The first time Tony Pearson came under fire was shortly after he arrived near the front lines in late September 1944. The 19-year-old from Saskatchewan had only days earlier been given a rifle and told to join the South Saskatchewan Regiment as an infantryman after training to be a tank driver.
Now he and his comrades were being bombed by Nazi artillery in Belgium.
“There were mortars and artillery, and the things were bouncing all over the place,” Pearson recalled 75 years later from his home in Nanaimo, B.C.
“Being a novice there, you wanted to have a look and see what was happening around you. And the voices would come from all over the place: ‘Get down, get down, get your head down. Don’t worry about what’s going on up there, get down.'”