I partied outside Buckingham Palace on VE Day
A great-grandmother who partied outside Buckingham Palace on VE Day says people will "never understand" what the day was like.
Margaret Johns, 99, was working as a nurse in London when Nazi Germany surrendered to the Allies, ending almost six years of conflict in Europe, on 8 May 1945.
Mrs Johns caught the Tube to central London and partied outside the palace, staying up late into the night.
"They should have given us the day off the next day," said Mrs Johns, from Haverfordwest in Pembrokeshire.
Mrs Johns' education had come to an abrupt end at the age of 16, despite being a good student.
For two years, at the peak of World War Two, she worked at the RAE in Aberporth, Ceredigion, testing ammunition.
She then went to London in 1944 for her nurse's training and worked through blackouts and bombings in London hospitals for five years before returning to Wales, continuing to work into her 80s.
Mrs Johns recalled VE Day [Victory in Europe Day], which saw her catch the Tube to central London and go to Buckingham Palace.
"You can never understand what VE Day was like unless you experienced it," she said.
'It's the end - we're going home'
Jean Rees, who served in the Women's Royal Naval Service, also partied in London on VE Day [Royal Navy/BBC]
Jean Rees was part of the Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS) - known as the Wrens - stationed in Eastleigh, Hampshire, during World War Two.
The 101-year-old, who now lives in Swansea, was conscripted at the age of 19 and her job was to welcome the new recruits, issue their uniforms and offer support to the often terrified young people.
Mrs Rees remembered being known as the "rum boson" onboard HM Raven as she had control over which of "the boys" could have a tipple, and which were underage.
"The Wrens didn't get it... which wasn't fair," she said.
"But life in the Wrens was wonderful."
She met her late husband - Bill Rees from Swansea who was in the Royal Air Force - in an officer's club and he proposed the same evening.
The pair got married the following year and lived happily together until his death in 2015.
Mrs Rees said she had vivid memories of the war, such as the black skies of D-Day in June 1944 and helping returning soldiers find clothes, food and somewhere to stay.
But she also recalled the elation on VE Day, adding: "News went round the camp very quickly and we were given leave to celebrate, so it was up to London.
"When we got there, there were thousands [of people], of all nationalities. Everybody was singing.
"After that, we all went back and began to think 'it's the end, we're going home'."
'I was no hero'
Joseph Gibson recalls being in the desert on VE Day, celebrating with a can of beer and a tin of cigarettes [BBC]
Joseph Gibson, a great-grandfather who lives in Hawarden, Flintshire, was a so-called Desert Rat during the war - a group of British soldiers who helped defeat the Germans in North Africa.
His tour of duty took him to Egypt and he later served in the Middle East.
Mr Gibson, 99, said the conditions - particularly the heat - were extremely difficult, adding he was "frightened to death".
He recalled being in the desert on VE Day and being given "a can of beer and a tin of cigarettes" to celebrate.
He said it was "wonderful" to return home, but tinged with the sadness of knowing many friends he made along the way were not so lucky.
"I was just a soldier, a normal soldier, like thousands and thousands of others," he said.
"I was no hero."
'The forgotten conscripts'
Emrys Hughes says he got little recognition for a "very dangerous" role in the war effort [BBC]
But VE Day did not mark the end of wartime service for everyone.
Emrys Hughes, 98, was one of the 48,000 so-called Bevin Boys - young men conscripted to work down the mines to help the British effort for coal, instead of being called up for military service.
Dubbed the "forgotten conscripts", they worked long days doing dirty, hard labour.
But Mr Hughes said he received little respect from the general public, who often treated the Bevin Boys as though they were dodging the war.
"Everyone thought I was a conscientious objector," he recalled.
He grew up in the village of Rhostryfan, Gwynedd, and when he was old enough to fight in 1943 he had hoped to get a place in the RAF.
"But I was told my services were no longer required," he said.
"You had no choice, you had to go to the mines."
Unlike many of those serving in the British military, there was no de-mob after VE Day for the Bevin Boys, with many forced to stay on in the mines until 1948.
There was also no military pension, no guarantees they could return to their previous jobs, or compensation for disabling injuries underground.
It was not until 1995 that the Bevin Boys were officially recognised as veterans by the UK government.
"It showed we did something during the war... Everybody did their bit."
'I never really recovered'
John Eskdale was stationed in Australia on VE day and said, for him and many others, service continued on as normal [Royal Navy/BBC]
John Eskdale, a 100-year-old former Royal Marine, was in Australia on VE Day, working as a driver on a project building air bases between Australia and Japan.
For Mr Eskdale, as for many other military personnel, the war did not end until Victory over Japan Day (VJ Day) in August 1945.
He did not leave the Royal Marines, due to injury, until 1948.
"It's very emotional and hard, looking back," said Mr Eskdale, originally from Bridgend.
He worked on the HMS Charybdis in 1943 when it was torpedoed by German boats, killing more than 400 men.
He spent "a harrowing five hours in the freezing water" before becoming the last of 107 crew members to be rescued.
"I never really recovered from this experience," he said.
Mr Eskdale said he hoped no-one "ever had to witness" the horrors that those who served in World War Two experienced.
He urged people to "take life as it comes", because "you never know what's around the corner".
Additional reporting by George Herd, Iolo Cheung, Sarah Easedale and Greg Davies
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hometown Hero – Izzy Sousa, St. Raphael
PAWTUCKET, RI (WPRI) — This week's Cardi's Furniture & Mattresses Hometown Sports Hero is Izzy Sousa. The St. Raphael Sophomore has gone 11-2 on the mound with a 0.91 ERA and 156 Strikeouts in 85 Innings, helping the Saints earn the top seed in the Division II State Softball Playoffs. Her success coming a year after she pitched Cranston East to the D-III State Title. 'I think it just shows that the work she put in the offseason to get stronger, because she knew she was coming up a Division, maybe two if we had stayed in Division I, she put the work in the weight room, she got so much stronger,' said Saints Head Coach Ron Larabee. 'She's amazing. Such a work horse.' 'Yeah, I think I noticed a lot of differences in my game, especially over the Summer, coming up from D-III to D-II, I mean I knew I was definitely going to have to improve myself as a person, improve myself as a player,' Sousa said. 'So, over the Summer I worked really hard, got my speed up a little bit. Started hitting my spots more consistently so I think I definitely got a lot better mentally and physically.' Transitioning to her new school and new program made easier by her new teammates. 'I mean you feel like you go into every season feeling jittery, you never know what's going to happen, but I feel like when I saw this group come to tryouts, all the girls really accepted me,' Sousa said. 'So, I felt very good coming in, so I had really high expectations for us because I knew we were all going to mesh so well together.' Sousa will look to continue to grow this Summer with her Waves Softball U16 team. A successful season should put her on the radar of college coaches and with two years still to go in her high school career, the dream of playing Division I College Softball could become a reality. 'We go away every weekend, we're going to play all around New England,' Sousa said. 'I'm going away for some weeks at a time in the Summer. I'm going out to Tampa for a little bit so I'm really, really excited for Summer. There's going to be a lot of traveling, a lot of games but you know that's what you get excited for. Summer softball is definitely the best.' 'She's just getting stronger every day, she works so hard every day,' Larabee said. 'I'm hoping that she stays right here and I'm hoping I can see her just grow into that a nice college player that she wants to be.' If you have a Hometown Sports Hero you'd like to nominate, email sports@ Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
World War II pilot from Georgetown finally accounted for
The Brief Georgetown pilot killed during World War II finally accounted for Charles W. McCook was killed in a plane crash in Burma McCook will be buried in Georgetown in August WASHINGTON - A Georgetown pilot killed during World War II has finally been accounted for, according to the U.S. government. What we know The U.S. Department of Defense's POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) says that 23-year-old Charles W. McCook, a first lieutenant in the Army Air Forces, was accounted for on April 18. McCook, who was from Georgetown, was killed during World War II. In summer 1943, he was a member of the 22nd Bombardment Squadron (Medium), 341st Bombardment Group (Medium), 10th Air Force. On Aug. 3, 1943, while he was the Armor-Gunner of a B-25C on a low-altitude bombing raid in Burma, his plane crashed. McCook was one of four killed; the two survivors were captured by Japanese forces. His remains were not recovered after the war, and he was declared missing in action. Dig deeper In 1947, four sets of remains, later designated X-282A-D, were recovered from a common grave near a Burmese village. Local witnesses said the remains came from an "American crash". The remains could not be identified at the time and thus were interred as "unknowns" in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii. In Jan. 2022, all four sets of remains were exhumed and taken to the DPAA for analysis. Scientists then used dental, anthropological and isotope analysis to identify his remains. The Armed Forces Medical Examiner System also used mitochondrial DNA analysis and genome sequencing data. What's next McCook will be buried in Georgetown in August. His name was recorded on the Walls of the Missing at the Manila American Cemetery and Memorial in the Philippines, along with others missing from WWII. A rosette will be placed next to his name to show he has been accounted for. The Source Information in this report comes from the US Dept of Defense's POW/MIA Accounting Agency.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Why Ronna McDaniel wants to make Michigan ‘reliably red'
(NewsNation) — Ronna McDaniel, a former chair of the Republican National Committee, is back in the political spotlight after taking on a position as CEO of the 'Michigan Forward Network' to help make the Wolverine State consistently Republican. McDaniel joined 'NewsNation Now' to discuss her new role and why she believes Michigan needs more Republican policies. 'This is going to be an infrastructure that's here that's going to build and grow as we focus on keeping Michigan red,' McDaniel said. Harvard has become a top Chinese Communist 'Party school': Report The 'Michigan Forward Network' aims to maintain control of the state House, state Senate and legislature and to highlight Democratic failures. It is backed by the DeVos family, one of the richest families in the state. McDaniel believes education 'is the pathway to success' in America and said Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, D-Mich., is to blame for Michigan's low ranking among reading skills. 'We want to hold her accountable and repudiate not just her but also Democrats across the state,' McDonald said. 'That is an abysmal failure. They should not be allowed to hold any office.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.