logo
VE Day is ‘last big chance to thank Second World War heroes'

VE Day is ‘last big chance to thank Second World War heroes'

Telegraph30-03-2025

Amongst the polite mingling, finger sandwiches and Union flag-themed slices of cake was the serious feeling that this would be one of the last gatherings of Second World War veterans to ever take place.
Six decorated attendees, aged 96 to 100 years old, convened at London's glamorous Ritz hotel on Friday, marking almost 80 years since the famous VE Day outing of Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret in the same hotel.
The tea party, organised by the Royal British Legion (RBL), was the official launch of the charity's commemorations to mark the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day.
It brought together Bletchley Park Enigma machine operator Ruth Bourne, 98, First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY) transmitter hut attendant Joyce Wilding, 100, Private Joe Mines, 100, codebreaker Bernard Morgan, 100, RAF soldier Gilbert Clarke, 99, and former child evacuee Doreen Mills, 96.
The high tea was billed as 'one of the last opportunities to come together and say thank you' to those who served the country from 1939 to 1945, ahead of the RBL's formal VE Day celebrations on May 8.
'This is one of the last major opportunities for the whole nation to pay tribute, to say thank you, to those that served, and to pay tribute to their courage and fortitude,' Mark Atkinson, director general of the RBL, told The Telegraph ahead of the poignant anniversary.
'There's not so many of us that are with it [any more] in a way,' Ms Wilding, who enlisted as a FANY aged 18 in Surrey, said over bites of The Ritz's Victoria sponge cake.
The centenarian, whose role as a transmitter hut attendant involved tuning powerful radios to receive messages from agents in occupied Europe, added that they formed a 'wonderful camaraderie' at the time.
'I must say it was a wonderful time of my life, [even] with all the tragedies and the terrible things that went on, but VE Day was just joyous, it was unbelievable,' she said. 'We danced the hokey cokey all the way down Piccadilly and ended up in front of the Palace.'
Ms Wilding was one of two veterans at the high tea event – and among an estimated 100,000 people in 1945 – who decided to celebrate the historic moment outside Buckingham Palace.
'There was an electric feeling going through the crowd,' said Ms Bourne, who was a Bombe machine operator and checker at Bletchley Park during the war. She was awarded the Legion d'honneur in recognition of her service in 2018.
Ms Bourne, who was only 17 when she joined the Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS) in 1944, added: 'In the end, we all broke out. We started shouting: 'We want the King, we want the King!'
'And believe it or not, they came out, the King and the Queen, Princess Elizabeth in her khaki uniform and Princess Margaret. Of course, we went wild.
'People were climbing up lamp posts, there wasn't an empty lamp post to be seen. We had a scarf, hat, whatever we had, we waved. I think that was the most exciting moment of my WRNS career, seeing the Royal family.'
Similarly to Ms Wilding, she spent the evening dancing down Piccadilly Circus, while a few miles down the road the two princesses were famously given permission by their father, King George VI, to go incognito among the revellers and to celebrate at the Ritz.
'The story is they did a dance through the Ritz Hotel,' Ms Wilding said of the now infamous tale, which has been immortalised in the 2015 film A Royal Night Out and in Netflix's popular dramatised series about the Royal family, The Crown.
Ms Bourne said 'no one knew it at the time,' and that the crowds outside the Palace were too busy 'doing the conga'.
She said: 'That's the old fashioned dance we were doing, complete strangers, holding on to one another. It was like we were all one great big family.'
As part of their national programme of celebrations to mark VE Day, the RBL is launching a range of downloadable resources available to all schools across the UK to help teachers plan related activities in classrooms.
At Friday's tea, three schoolchildren were invited to meet the veterans to ask them about their experience of the war and were able to observe Mr Morgan's original telex, which he received two days before VE Day to tell him the Germans are surrendering, and which he has since refused to give to any museums.
Mr Atkinson explained: 'You want to make sure that children are learning and talking about the Second World War… it's very important.
'It was great to have children here today to meet directly with people who were there 80 years ago, to hear their stories. That's a core part of what the legion has a responsibility for, it's making sure that the service and sacrifice is never forgotten.'
After speaking with the children, Ms Wilding remarked: 'I think it's lovely to know that they know about it, because so often I find that the younger ones are not really very knowledgeable, because they've never lived through an air raid or anything like it.'
'One didn't realise how near, you know, with Hitler, we were,' she added. 'We could have been in trouble really.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BBC rejects claim Call the Midwife star was 'disrespected' before shock exit
BBC rejects claim Call the Midwife star was 'disrespected' before shock exit

Metro

time12 hours ago

  • Metro

BBC rejects claim Call the Midwife star was 'disrespected' before shock exit

The BBC has responded to Call the Midwife's Olly Rix's comments on his sudden departure from the role of Matthew Aylward after three years on the BBC One drama. Fans were left devastated last year when Matthew announced that he would be moving to New York to try and make his fortune after losing his inheritance. He gave Trixie (Helen George) a relationship ultimatum and as the season wrapped up, it was unclear whether Rix would stay or go, leaving many Call the Midwife viewers saying he 'deserved better'. Yet the 40-year-old was subsequently cast on Casualty, confirming he would not be returning to the East End set. There were reports at the time that the cast were 'stunned and upset' Rix's character Matthew had been written out. Rix has since spoken about how he felt he wasn't 'treated with much integrity or respect' at the end of his time on the show, telling Hello! he now struggles to talk about Call the Midwife. A Call the Midwife spokesperson told Metro: 'We don't accept this. Call the Midwife is a drama that prides itself on providing a supportive, inclusive and nurturing filming environment, and we are known for the family atmosphere on our set. 'Series 15 is currently filming and we look forward to sharing this exciting new series with our beloved audience.' Rix told Hello!: 'It's hard for me to talk about that show. I don't love talking about it. 'I'm very fortunate. Most jobs, I think of very fondly but you do, of course, leave them in the past and move on and develop new work. 'With that project in particular, I didn't like the way it ended and I didn't think they treated me with much integrity or respect, and I didn't like that. 'I think it's just best left in the past and not discussed much more.' RadioTimes at the time reported that Rix's departure didn't necessarily mean it was the end of the road for the character of Matthew. According to the publication, the door was being left open for him to come back at some point in the future – whether that remains the case is unclear. More Trending Rix has now traded in his 50s period costume for scrubs to play former Special Forces medic Flynn Byron on Casualty. Meanwhile, the BBC has announced plans to make a Call the Midwife film as well as a prequel TV series set during the Second World War. The show's 15th series will begin with a two-part Christmas special which will see the cast of characters journey to Hong Kong on a mercy mission. View More » Call the Midwife returns this Christmas. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Race Across The World fans have limited time to apply for BBC series MORE: Popular BBC series to return to TV as huge cast changes are confirmed MORE: Casualty fans confused by BBC soap change as end of an era is confirmed

Protests over ‘please walk on me' flag artwork prompt its removal from gallery
Protests over ‘please walk on me' flag artwork prompt its removal from gallery

Leader Live

time3 days ago

  • Leader Live

Protests over ‘please walk on me' flag artwork prompt its removal from gallery

The Suter Art Gallery in the city of Nelson said it had taken down the work by Maori artist Diane Prince due to escalating tensions and safety fears. The episode mirrored an Auckland gallery's removal of the work amid a public backlash in 1995. This time, the flag was meant to remain on display for five months. Instead, it lasted just 19 days, reigniting long-running debates in New Zealand over artistic expression, national symbols and the country's colonial history. Police told the Associated Press that officers were investigating 'several' complaints about the exhibition. The piece, titled Flagging The Future, is a cloth New Zealand flag displayed on the floor with the words 'please walk on me' stencilled across it. The work was part of an exhibition, Diane Prince: Activist Artist, and was meant to provoke reflection on the Maori experience since New Zealand's colonisation by Britain in the 19th century. Ms Prince created the piece in 1995 in response to a government policy that limited compensation to Maori tribes for historical land theft. 'I have no attachment to the New Zealand flag,' she told Radio New Zealand in 2024. 'I don't call myself a New Zealander. I call myself a Maori.' New Zealand's reckoning with its colonial past has gathered pace in recent decades. But there has been little appetite among successive governments to sever the country's remaining constitutional ties to Britain or change the flag's design. New Zealand is among countries where desecrating the national flag is considered taboo and prohibited by law. Damaging a flag in public with intent to dishonour it is punishable by a fine of up to 5,000 New Zealand dollars, but prosecutions are fleetingly rare. As in the United States and elsewhere, the country's flag is synonymous for some with military service. But for others, particularly some Maori, it is a reminder of land dispossession, and loss of culture and identity. Protests against the artwork in the city of Nelson, which has a population 55,000, included videos posted to social media by a local woman, Ruth Tipu, whose grandfather served in the army's Maori Battalion during the Second World War. In one clip, she is seen lifting the flag from the floor and draping it over another artwork, an action Ms Tipu said she would repeat daily. A veterans' group also denounced the piece as 'shameful' and 'offensive'. City council member Tim Skinner said he was 'horrified' by the work's inclusion. But others welcomed it. Nelson's deputy mayor, Rohan O'Neill-Stevens, posted on social media 'in strong defence of artistic expression and the right for us all to be challenged and confronted by art'. The work was perhaps expected to provoke controversy and in the exhibition's opening days, the Suter Gallery defended its inclusion. But a statement on its Facebook page late Thursday said a 'sharp escalation in the tone and nature of the discourse, moving well beyond the bounds of respectful debate' had prompted the flag's removal. 'This should not be interpreted as a judgment on the artwork or the artist's intent,' the statement said.

Myleene Klass puts on a leggy display in skimpy leopard-print shorts as she arrives at Smooth Radio
Myleene Klass puts on a leggy display in skimpy leopard-print shorts as she arrives at Smooth Radio

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Myleene Klass puts on a leggy display in skimpy leopard-print shorts as she arrives at Smooth Radio

Myleene Klass set pulses racing as she arrived at Smooth Radio Studios in London on Friday. The TV personality, 47, looked incredible in a pair of skimpy leopard-print shorts that showcased her toned legs. She wore sheer black tights and paired the shorts with a black vest top and a smart blazer. Posing up a storm for the cameras, Myleene further accessorised her look with a layer of gold necklaces, a black baseball cap, and a pair of trendy oversized shades. To complete her look, she sported a pair of black ankle boots and toted her essentials in a black Chanel handbag as she made her way into the studio. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the Daily Mail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Earlier this month, Myleene led the stars celebrating the 80th anniversary of VE Day as she hosted a tribute concert at the Royal Albert Hall. Joined in her hosting duties by Katherine Jenkins and Dan Walker, she pulled out all the stops on the night in an eye-catching red gown. The singer certainly brought the glamour as she displayed her toned frame in the thigh-high split dress, which was adorned with a huge bow detailing. The event, sponsored by the Daily Mail, featured a show-stopping performance from mezzo-soprano Katherine and dancing from Strictly Come Dancing stars. The show also included first-hand recollections from military veterans and those who lived through the conflict. Former pop star Myleene, whose father served in the Merchant Navy, said it was 'both humbling and an honour' to be involved. She said: 'With it (VE Day) being 80 years now, and as our serving personnel from that time reach an age many never thought they'd see, it's essential we keep their sacrifices and memory alive.' Her co-host, former BBC Breakfast star Dan, told the Mail he considered it 'a real privilege' to be 'standing on that stage introducing some amazing people'. 'Those values of freedom and democracy matter today.' Marking the anniversary, King Charles also used a keynote speech to call for greater efforts towards global peace. With conflicts in Ukraine, the Middle East and across the African continent, His Majesty suggested it was time to remind ourselves of the words of our great wartime leader, Sir Winston Churchill, who said: 'Meeting jaw to jaw is better than war.' 'In so doing, we should also rededicate ourselves not only to the cause of freedom but to renewing global commitments to restoring a just peace where there is war, to diplomacy, and to the prevention of conflict,' he said. 'For as my grandfather [King George VI, who was monarch during the Second World War] put it: "We shall have failed, and the blood of our dearest will have flowed in vain, if the victory which they died to win does not lead to a lasting peace, founded on justice and established in good will." 'Just as those exceptional men and women fulfilled their duty to each other, to humankind, and to God, bound by an unshakeable commitment to nation and service, in turn, it falls to us to protect and continue their precious legacy – so that one day hence generations yet unborn may say of us: "they too bequeathed a better world".'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store