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Sons of Scotland Pipe Band celebrates 80th anniversary of VE Day in Ottawa

Sons of Scotland Pipe Band celebrates 80th anniversary of VE Day in Ottawa

Ottawa Citizen03-05-2025

Ottawa marked the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day (VE Day) with bagpipe players lined up from the Canadian War Museum to the War Memorial on Saturday afternoon.
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The Sons of Scotland Pipe Band, composed of 80 pipers and 20 drummers, were stationed at 80 spots along Wellington Street.
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Each piper, dressed in kilt and doublet, began playing from their designated positions along the street in one-minute intervals.
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VE Day marks the day Germany unconditionally surrendered its military forces to the Allied forces on May 8, 1945. In Paris and London there was a outpouring of joy and Canadians joined the celebrations. In Toronto, thousands danced in the streets while three Mosquito aircraft dropped tickertape from overhead.
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More than a million Canadian soldiers served in the Second World War, and 45,000 were killed. Canadians played a key role throughout the war, such as liberating and the Netherlands from German occupiers and bringing aid to the Dutch.
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Alan Beveridge, one of the bagpipers, was born 10 years after VE Day. He is turning 70 on Thursday and was 70th in line. He's a retired soldier.
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'We all owe a debt of gratitude to the men and women who served during the Second World War,' he told Postmedia on Saturday afternoon.
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'We also owe a debt of gratitude to our soldiers and sailors and airmen who continue to serve now, helping to keep Canada free.'
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