
Appeal for cards to mark Southend Royal Navy veteran's 100th birthday
The 76-year-old said Mr Shelley was the branch's 'last Arctic convoy veteran and also he was at D-Day'.Mr Shelley's carer Paul Bennett said Mr Shelley was on the HMS Milne on D-Day 'supporting the chaps going off to land in craft ashore in Normandy and he was a gunner keeping the skies clear of enemy aircraft'.Mr Hawes said the veteran had previously been the local branch's chairman, secretary and treasurer but 'as he got older he had to stop some of those jobs'.'He's always been there, he's always got a smile, he always wants to chat,' he said.'He really deserves something, he has been one of our founder members way back in 1980 I think it was when the actual club opened.'He's always been with us on the Remembrance Sunday in his wheelchair and somebody's pushed him up to the cenotaph at Southend.'He is hoping to collate at least 100 birthday cards for Mr Shelley.'I think he's going to thoroughly enjoy it, he really will, he'll be over the moon,' said Mr Hawes.'Dougie always likes to let everybody know he's there and this will blow his socks off I think.'Mr Hawes, who was a chef and baker on the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle, is to make Mr Shelley's birthday cake – a Victoria sandwich.He said Mr Shelley 'does like his tot of rum' and that this would be offered to guests, with a bottle of Pusser's Rum presented to the veteran.Mr Hawes asked for birthday cards for Mr Shelley to be sent to the Royal Naval Association club, 73-79 East Street, Southend-on-Sea, Essex, SS2 6LQ.
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Press and Journal
an hour ago
- Press and Journal
Happy 100th birthday to D-Day hero and Turriff legend Jim Glennie
Most of the old soldiers who took part in the D-Day landings in Normandy in 1944 are no longer with us. Yet, most Tuesdays at the Gordon Highlanders Museum in Aberdeen, the staff and volunteers relish the chance to say hello to their friend and colleague Jim Glennie. He has become a fixture at the venue where he has spent decades acting as a guide, a storyteller, somebody who even met and shook hands with a former enemy. The Turriff man has never regarded himself as anything special. But he was awarded the Legion d'Honneur in 2015 and a BEM in the most recent New Year Honours. And, today, he is celebrating his 100th birthday – the last of his generation from the north-east of Scotland who served the regiment with distinction. Jim was just 18 years old when he was involved in the D-Day campaign and witnessed scenes which were forever seared in his memory. By the end of the first day, more than 4,000 Allied soldiers had been killed, yet the advance continued unabated as they locked horns with their German opponents. As he once recalled: 'I could swim, but my pal Ronnie McIntosh and another boy Norrie couldn't, so I said I would help one of them to shore and then go back for the other. 'But when we landed, the water just came up to our knees. I put my foot on the sand and, as the water came flooding into the craft, there was a dead body next to me. 'But you weren't allowed to stop. The sergeant told us: 'Don't stop, go straight on!' 'We ran towards a field and someone shouted out: 'Hold it, there are mines!' The place was covered in them. 'You were scared within yourself, but you didn't show it. You just didn't know what you were getting yourself in for – it was very dodgy.' Jim and his colleagues made some progress, but he and his company were ambushed by Germans while they were making their way towards Caen. Several were killed or wounded, but Jim and others managed to take temporary cover in a roadside trench as German Panzer armoured vehicles approached. He said: 'The [Panzer] tanks came past and were just spraying us, but we managed to keep our heads down. 'I remember thinking: 'I don't like this' and I jumped out and ran up the road to try and get them when they came round a bend. 'So I was standing there, firing my gun and, all of a sudden, I felt shots hit me in my right arm and the gun just dropped out of my hand.' It was the end of his war. After recovering in hospital, Jim was transferred along with hundreds of other POWs to Stalag IV-B in Germany. His first day in the camp was his 19th birthday. In 2017 at the museum, Jim met Karl Hunnold, who was shot by Allied forces before being rescued by a Gordon Highlanders battalion. After shaking Karl's hand, he said: 'We have no grudges against each other.' The German nonagenarian had been invited to visit after his stepson Roland Goertz asked the museum to send his father a card ahead of his 91st birthday. As Jim once recalled: 'Although we can't speak to each other directly because of the language barrier, we can both understand each other because of what we've been through.' And responding through his stepson, Karl added: 'Being here and meeting Jim in the museum of the Highlanders who saved my life, brings very positive emotions.' Many of the troops who eventually returned home were reluctant to talk about their experiences. In multiple cases, they were suffering from undiagnosed PTSD. And they couldn't bring themselves to relive the slaughter and conflict which they had seen across Europe and further afield in front of their family and friends. However, the creation of the Gordon Highlanders Museum in 1997 offered the veterans an opportunity to tell youngsters about what they had gone through. 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'His support to the museum has been magnificent and it is perfect that we are able to enjoy a very special day with him here in what has almost been his second home. 'I know all Gordon Highlanders will join me in wishing him a happy 100th birthday.' John McLeish, the chief executive of the museum, was equally effusive in his praise. He said: 'Jim is an important member of our team and his personality and generosity of spirit add something very special to the camaraderie exhibited by team members. 'Watching him engaging with museum visitors is a sight to behold. He makes a regular museum visit very special indeed and, ultimately, he makes people smile!' That is a fulsome testimony to a wonderful human being; somebody who lived through the worst of human behaviour, and was able to take something positive from it. Happy birthday Jim.


Press and Journal
an hour ago
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The Courier
an hour ago
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