BX August 30, 1916
Great Reception to 125th At Liverpool – Private John Patrick Powers Tells of the Fine Trip Across the “Herring Pond”
Mr. John Powers, 153 Darling Street, has received the following letter from his son, Pte. John Powers:
August 18, 1916
Liverpool
We arrived here safe and sound. We left Halifax on Aug. 9. They kept us in the bay at Halifax four days. We had good weather all the way over. I was not sick one day. We had a funeral at sea. A soldier on the ship behind us died and they buried him the next day. They stopped all the boats and they put the body on a plank and at 12 o’clock they put the plank up. The body was sewed in canvas and iron bales put on his feet to take it to the bottom of the ocean. There was hardly any sickness on board. We saw a few whales and porpoises and there was one shark following the ship that had the dead body on. We had a cruiser to protect us and when we were about ten miles from Liverpool five torpedo boats came out to meet us.
It sure was some grand sight coming up the Irish coast. Talk about pretty sights, it is worth lots of money to see. We could not leave the cars and 40 miles off of Halifax we had to pull down the blinds and put out the lights and keep them that way until we got to Halifax. We stayed in the cars that night and went out to the boat Sunday morning in the bay about three miles and stayed there until Wednesday morning, when we sailed. They gave us a great send off. There were four warships in the harbor, and the way they make a noise is worth hearing. All the boats in the harbor blew their whistles. We also got a great reception at Liverpool and New Brighton, which is across the Mersey River from Liverpool. It is a seaside resort. I am writing this on the train. I don’t know where we are going, but I am on the way, but I think we are going to Southampton.
I wish you could see the trains over here. They’re partitioned off in little rooms, holding six each and you get in from the side. We came over on the Scandinavian and they fed us the best in the land and we have nice clean berths.
Pte. John Powers
B. Co. 125th, Canadian
Post office,
London, England