
Peterborough WW2 veteran recognised in King's Birthday Honours
The daughter of a World War Two veteran recognised in the King's Birthday Honours said it took "a while" for her father to come to terms with the news.Geoffrey Roberts, 99, from Peterborough, will become a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for services to commemoration of the Battle of Arnhem and to charity.His daughter, Claire Welburn, said: "It's taken him a while to come to terms with it, because he always says, 'I didn't do anything'."Mr Roberts was captured in the Battle of Arnhem in September 1944, in which more than 8,000 British soldiers were killed, missing or taken prisoner.
The battle was a failure, as the Allies did not secure a bridge over the Rhine at the Dutch city of Arnhem.Mr Roberts was sent to a prisoner of war camp and put to work in a coal mine until the end of the war.Ms Welburn said her father went back to the Netherlands every year to pay his respects."Every time he goes back, it's very emotional, every year we always go to Oosterbeek Commonwealth War Cemetery," she said."He goes straight to his two friends Plummer and Brown, who died during the battle."She said her father wanted to praise the Taxi Charity for Military Veterans, which helped him with his annual visit.
Mr Roberts, who was born in the Chelsea Barracks in London in 1925 and celebrates his 100th birthday later this month, joined the Army in 1942.Ms Welburn said her father was surprised when he found out he would become an MBE."His first words actually were, 'I'm not very happy about that'," she said."He always says, 'the heroes are the ones lying in the cemetery', and he's just one of the lucky ones."
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Glasgow Times
10 hours ago
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