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Street parties in North East and Cumbria mark VE Day anniversary

Street parties in North East and Cumbria mark VE Day anniversary

BBC News05-05-2025

People across the north-east of England and Cumbria have been joining in the national celebrations for VE Day.The occasion commemorates Victory in Europe - the end of nearly six years of war on 8 May 1945 - when Nazi German forces surrendered unconditionally to the Allies in World War Two.Street parties recreating the "spirit of '45" have been held in places including Durham, Hexham, Darlington and Shap.Events will continue until Thursday - VE Day's 80th anniversary.
Speaking during the festivities in Hopetown, Darlington Borough Council's armed forces champion Rebecca Baker said it was important to remember the "massive sacrifices" people made during World War Two."It's a very poignant time right now and it's a very big anniversary, so making sure young people are aware just how important peace is and maintaining that is really valuable," she said.
In Durham there was a community street party and nostalgia event in the Market place.People dressed in 1940s clothing, there were vintage vehicles, a brass band and singers.Susan Walker, from Durham Parish Council, said: "I think it's incredibly important to remember."Today is all about peace and unity, it's not about glorifying war, but if we forget these wars we forget about all these terrible things that have happened and we will make these mistakes again."
In Cumbria, local historian Joseph Ritson has been compiling a roll of honour listing those from Cleator Moor who took part in the war.He said: "We have to remember the people who died, the people who served, the people on the home front and I think the young people today, the school children, are very keen on learning about all this in their local area."Much of what they laid down is what we have today, with the relative peace that we have and many of the industries we have here were, surprisingly enough, founded in that period of the second world war."Various landmarks will be lit up later, including Lowther Castle in Penrith.
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In 1933, the Oxford University Union overwhelmingly passed a motion 'That this House will under no circumstances fight for its King and country'. A few years later, many who voted in favour did just that Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Exactly 81 years ago today, at around 6.30 in the early morning light, the first waves of what amounted to some 156,000 Allied soldiers by the end of the day landed on the beaches of Normandy. They had been preceded the night before by roughly 23,400 comrades who landed by parachute and glider. The long-awaited liberation of Nazi-occupied Europe had begun. 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Nazi Germany and her armies, air force, and naval assets were ground down relentlessly until their final surrender in May 1945. Members of the Royal Marines land on Juno beach, Normandy, on D-Day (Picture: Hulton Archive) | Getty Images Fooling the Germans And yet D-Day hadn't been without its hiccups. Bad weather had caused the operation to be cancelled the day before when many troops had already embarked on the landing ships, and the rough seas made it doubtful right up to the last few hours whether it could go ahead on June 6. There was also the fear that the Germans might have known what was coming. Notwithstanding the Allies' complex and masterful deception plan designed to persuade the Germans that the real invasion would take place across the Pas de Calais, the shortest route across the English Channel, nobody was quite sure that they had been fooled. 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