logo
VE Day: Cardiff WW2 tank driver gets award on 100th birthday

VE Day: Cardiff WW2 tank driver gets award on 100th birthday

BBC News06-05-2025
WW2 tank driver stopped on VE Day by flat battery
6 minutes ago
Share
Save
Share
Save
Walter Foster
Walter Foster tuned 100 two months before the 80th anniversary of VE Day
A World War Two tank driver remembers having to a get a tow because his tank's battery was flat when he heard news of the end of the war in Europe.
"I thought: What the hell am I doing here'?" Walter Foster laughed.
Ahead of events to mark the VE Day on Thursday, he was awarded a special certificate signed by the Colonel of Scots Guard Regiment, the Duke of Edinburgh, on the occasion of his 100th birthday.
"I can only say that I feel really humble," said the retired nurse from Llanishen, Cardiff, who parachuted into France on D-Day, got wounded in the leg, before driving tanks all the way to Germany and the liberation of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
"It was so upsetting," he said of the the Holocaust survivors he saw.
"They were just skeletons and although we opened the gates for them they didn't move... they just sat down or lolled and didn't get up. How they were alive I don't know.
"It broke my hear to see that."
The last day of the war was bittersweet for the then 20-year-old driver, losing a tank commander who "went berserk" after hearing the war was over.
"He went running up the street with a Bren gun and he was riddled by this number 88 that tore him off the ground and that was in my memory."
He said his tank and crew were pinned down by the enemy at the time.
"When I eventually tried to get out I found my tank wouldn't start, I had a flat battery.
"I had to be towed out at the same time listening on the wireless that the war's over and I thought: 'What the hell am I doing here'?"
Walter Foster
Walter Foster was injured on D-Day but was able to drive a tank into Nazi Germany as the war in Europe ended
He parachuted into France and fought in fierce tank battles near Caen.
Along the way he saw soldiers bodies mummified from being left so long on the battlefield: "It was a very traumatic time."
What is Walter's message to young people today?
"The most important thing is to be proud of your country, all of it, and if necessary be prepared to defend it to the utmost," he said.
On behalf of Scots Guards, officer Ronnie Wilkie told Mr Foster: "We are all exceptionally proud of you and your service."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Leeds parents 'consumed' by struggle to find school transport
Leeds parents 'consumed' by struggle to find school transport

BBC News

time13 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Leeds parents 'consumed' by struggle to find school transport

Parents of children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) have said their summer has been "consumed" by trying to arrange school transport for the new this year, Leeds City Council announced that SEND students aged over 16 would no longer be provided with a free school transport after the authority decided to cut the service to save £800, pupils have instead been awarded a personal travel allowance or a bus pass, but other parents said they may have to cut their working hours to drive their children to school or college. Councillor Helen Hayden, who oversees children's services in the city, said it was a "decision no-one wanted to make" but the service was not sustainable at its current level. Richard is a single father who looks after his daughter Poppy, 16. She has Down's syndrome, autism and complex learning needs, and for the past five years Leeds City Council has provided transport from their home in Otley to John Jamieson, a specialist inclusive learning centre in east Leeds. This support has meant he could work full-time to provide for his family. In June, following the local authority's decision to only provide home to school transport to young people with SEND in "exceptional circumstances", Poppy's case was assessed. Leeds City Council offered to provide some financial assistance but Richard said it meant he would still have to drive her himself. "It would mean I would get to work at 10:00 and have to leave at 14:30, which would impact the family - and the business I work for, it just isn't viable and has consequences."He has appealed against the decision but does not believe he will get an answer until after schools go back in September, which means he will have to drive Poppy and "catch up on work in the evening, which will impact on my life".Richard believes the council's policy is "hurting lots of people", adding: "Instead of spending the summer holidays with our children, we're having to spend the holiday trying to find out if we'll get transport to school in September." Rachel Ashton has found herself in a similar situation. Her daughter Bella has learning difficulties, autism and the learning age of a five-year-old. Bella has had a place on council transport from her home in Horsforth to Boston Spa since she was 11 and her parents have paid a contribution of £300 a month as well. However, now she is 16 the family have been told she is "no longer eligible".Ms Ashton said that because she and her husband both work, they can't drive her there themselves, and she can't give up her job because the family need her income. She added: "She can't do a journey alone, she will need an escort and the quotes we have for an escort are £25,000 a year, which is not sustainable". The family have already appealed Leeds City Council's decision once, but it was rejected and they are preparing a second Ashton said: "This means Bella will not be able to start her post-16 education in September, so she will be out of education." According to campaign group Save Our School Transport, more than 1,000 children will be affected by the policy Harley-Roberts is part of the campaign group hoping to reverse the authority's decision. Her daughter has also turned Harley-Roberts is the service manager for Sunshine and Smiles, a Down's syndrome support network in Leeds. She accepts that helping children to travel independently is "fantastic" for students who are able to, but for a "large number of young people it is just not viable".She said a number of parents who are part of the campaign are in a similar position to Richard and may have to cut the number of hours they Harley-Roberts cited the statutory guidance around transport and said the "transport provided has to be reasonable and take into account all relevant matters".She added that some parents in the group believed the alternatives offered to them were not reasonable.A review is due in the autumn on how the policy is impacting families, but she feared this was "too little too late". Hayden, the council's executive member for children and families, said continuing to offer "discretionary" transport for over-16s was no longer financially added that the policy was being implemented based on the needs of children, rather than the ability of parents to take them to their educational said that there was no definitive list of the "exceptional circumstances" that would entitle families to continue receiving travel assistance as the council wanted to keep the criteria "as flexible as possible".Hayden also explained that the appeals process was paused in July because the authority had made some changes to it. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North or tell us a story you think we should be covering here.

King Charles says VJ Day heroes ‘shall never be forgotten' on 80th anniversary
King Charles says VJ Day heroes ‘shall never be forgotten' on 80th anniversary

The Independent

time42 minutes ago

  • The Independent

King Charles says VJ Day heroes ‘shall never be forgotten' on 80th anniversary

The King has hailed the 'courage and camaraderie' of heroes who fought in the Pacific and Far East in 'humanity's darkest hour' as 'a flame that shall blaze for eternity' on the 80th anniversary of VJ Day. Charles also significantly acknowledged the devastation caused by the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki which led to Japan 's surrender, describing the 'immense price' on its citizens as one 'we pray no nation need ever pay again'. His reflection on the nuclear attacks, which paved the way for the end of the Second World War, comes at a time of increased concern about the global threat of nuclear conflict. In an audio message to the nation, realms and Commonwealth, the King spoke of the horrors faced by allied prisoners of war 'who endured years of brutal captivity: the starvation, disease and cruelty that tested the very limits of human endurance', and the 'mental and physical scars' the war left on those who survived. And he vowed the service and sacrifice of VJ Day heroes 'shall never be forgotten', telling their families and the 'sadly dwindling band of veterans': 'Please know that the courage and camaraderie displayed in humanity's darkest hour is a flame that shall blaze for eternity – a beacon that honours our past and guides our future.' The King, in what is believed to be the most direct reference by a British monarch to the suffering in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, said it was right to pause and acknowledge the impact of the 'war's final act' on the people of the Japanese cities. 'Innocent civilian populations of occupied territories faced grievous hardships, too,' he said in the broadcast released at 7.30am on Friday. 'Their experience reminds us that war's true cost extends beyond battlefields, touching every aspect of life – a tragedy all-too vividly demonstrated by conflicts around the world today. 'On this landmark anniversary, we should also pause to acknowledge that in the war's final act, an immense price was paid by the citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki – a price we pray no nation need ever pay again.' He added: 'But in recalling so much suffering, we must not lose sight of how great was the cause and how sweet the victory.' VJ Day on August 15 marks the anniversary of the end of the six-year-long war. Much of the celebration in 1945 focused on VE (Victory in Europe) Day in May, with those who served in the Far East labelled The Forgotten Army. The King's six-minute address was broadcast ahead of a national service of remembrance due to be attended by Charles, the Queen and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire. Also there as guests of honour will be 33 veterans aged from 96 to 105, who served in the Far East and Pacific. A national two-minute silence will be held at noon and the Red Arrows will join historic Spitfire and Hurricane aircraft for flypast over the commemorations. By 1945, some 365,000 British and 1.5 million Commonwealth troops had been deployed across Asia and the Pacific. More than 90,000 British troops were casualties in the war against Japan, and nearly 30,000 died, while more than 12,000 Britons were among the 190,000 Commonwealth troops held as Prisoners of War by the Japanese. Of the Allied forces, the US suffered the greatest losses, with more than 100,000 killed in action. In Hiroshima and Nagasaki, more than 200,000 people were killed by the US bombs and in the months after succumbing to radiation sickness, the effects of burns and other serious injuries. The King described the 80th anniversary as a day of 'profound remembrance' and said of his grandfather King George's VI's 'The war is ended' audio broadcast at the time: 'Seldom can a simple message have resonated with such a potent mix of relief, celebration, and sorrow for those who never lived to see the glow of freedom's new dawn.' He also painted a vivid picture of when 'high above those monsoon-lashed jungles, allied pilots displayed their own fearless bravery, flying fighters, bombers and transport aircraft into enemy fire and nature's fury'. The speech made no mention of the King's father Prince Philip, the late Duke of Edinburgh, who was in Tokyo Bay on board the destroyer HMS Whelp, a warship he served on as second-in-command, when Japanese officials formally signed the surrender on the USS Missouri on September 2 1945. But Charles paid tribute to his mentor and great uncle Earl Mountbatten, who oversaw the defeat of the Japanese offensive towards India as Supreme Allied Commander South East Asia Command. He recalled how Lord Mountbatten taught him about the 'horrors and heroism' of the conflict. The King said: 'The war in South East Asia had reached its climax under the leadership of my great uncle, Lord Mountbatten, from whom I learned so much about the particular horrors and heroism witnessed in those furthest fields of combat. 'The forces aligned under him comprised over one million men and women, drawn from many different countries, religions and communities, but united by common purpose and indomitable spirit.' Charles said he was aware of the 'mental and physical scars' the conflict left on those who survived. 'Twenty-Nine Victoria Crosses bear eloquent testimony to their valour, but I know full well of the toll it took on so many – measured not only in gravestones, but in the mental and physical scars of those who survived,' he said. He also cited the collaboration across faiths and cultural divides, saying: 'Together they proved that, in times of war and in times of peace, the greatest weapons of all are not the arms you bear, but the arms you link. 'That remains a vital lesson for our times.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store