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Erroll Pilkington Gillespie Letters

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Sunday April 21th 1918  
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Sunday April 21th 18  
  
on board A.M.J.Scotia "somewhere on Atlantic"
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on board H.M.T. Scotian "somewhere on Atlantic"
  
 
My dear Father
 
My dear Father
  
Today being Sunday I thought I wouldn't do better then drop you a line & give you the latest up till now, so here goes. We left Halifax about 4 pm Wednesday 17th & have been steaming along slowly ever since, this old boat is a pretty slow traveler, we only make about 12 knots, though I believe she can do 16 at a pinch, probably she could if there was a submarine after her! The speed of the whole convoy of course is regulated by the the slowest boat. There is one other slower then us, so you see our progress across is not very rapid, however as long as we get there in the end, that's the main thing. After we were about a day out from Halifax we joined a convoy of ships from New York, so that now we are quite a little fleet in ourselves, we are a dozen in number some pretty big boats in the convoy, the ones from N.Y. are all laden with U.S. troops. I have been having a good look at them through
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Today being Sunday I thought I wouldn't do better than drop you a line & give you the latest up till now, so here goes -
  
BC Archives MS-2685 Box 17 File 3
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We left Halifax about 4 pm Wednesday 17th & have been steaming along slowly ever since, this old boat is a pretty slow traveler, we only make about 12 knots, though I believe she can do 16 at a pinch, probably she could if there was a submarine after her! The speed of the whole convoy of course is regulated by the the slowest boat. There is one other slower than we, so you see our progress across is not very rapid, however as long as we get there in the end, that's the main thing. After we were about a day out from Halifax we joined a convoy of ships from New York, so that now we are quite a little fleet in ourselves, we are a dozen in number some pretty big boats in the convoy, the ones from N.Y. are all laden with U.S. troops. I have been having a good look at them through
  
OLIVER, William Edgar, 1867-1920. Victoria; lawyer. Erroll P. Gillespie, correspondence outward, 1917-1919.
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BC Archives, MS-2685 Box 17 File 3 / OLIVER, William Edgar, 1867 1920. Victoria; lawyer. / Erroll P. Gillespie, correspondence outward, 1917 1919.

Revision as of Jul 29, 2015, 3:16:44 PM

Sunday April 21th 18

on board H.M.T. Scotian "somewhere on Atlantic"

My dear Father

Today being Sunday I thought I wouldn't do better than drop you a line & give you the latest up till now, so here goes -

We left Halifax about 4 pm Wednesday 17th & have been steaming along slowly ever since, this old boat is a pretty slow traveler, we only make about 12 knots, though I believe she can do 16 at a pinch, probably she could if there was a submarine after her! The speed of the whole convoy of course is regulated by the the slowest boat. There is one other slower than we, so you see our progress across is not very rapid, however as long as we get there in the end, that's the main thing. After we were about a day out from Halifax we joined a convoy of ships from New York, so that now we are quite a little fleet in ourselves, we are a dozen in number some pretty big boats in the convoy, the ones from N.Y. are all laden with U.S. troops. I have been having a good look at them through

BC Archives, MS-2685 Box 17 File 3 / OLIVER, William Edgar, 1867 – 1920. Victoria; lawyer. / Erroll P. Gillespie, correspondence outward, 1917 – 1919.