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Another growing AI startup makes a big move in downtown S.F.
Another growing AI startup makes a big move in downtown S.F.

San Francisco Chronicle​

time09-07-2025

  • Business
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Another growing AI startup makes a big move in downtown S.F.

On the heels of securing a fresh funding infusion last month, San Francisco-based artificial intelligence startup Harvey AI is now upgrading its downtown office. The company, which provides AI solutions for attorneys, is on the verge of a deal with Los Angeles-based Kilroy Realty Corp., which is one of the Bay Area's more prominent commercial landlords. It's unclear whether the parties have signed, though real estate insiders told the Chronicle that a deal involving Harvey leasing 92,000-square-feet of office space at 201 3rd St. was imminent. Kilroy declined to comment on the deal when contacted by the Chronicle. But, a spokesperson for Harvey, who also declined to share specifics, confirmed that the company will be moving to the new Third Street location 'later this fall.' It's been a tough five years for Kilroy and other commercial landlords in San Francisco since the start of the pandemic, but the city's office market is now showing signs of a very slow recovery period — largely thanks to demand for new offices from AI startups. Harvey is currently based in a smaller, 30,000-square-foot office at 575 Market St., and had been perusing the market for a larger space for some time — it came close to signing a deal at 525 Market St. several months ago, the Chronicle learned. It's unclear why that deal did not materialize. The company's lease with Kilroy takes the growing startup away from Market Street, placing it across the street from the city's Moscone Convention Center and near the Museum of Modern Art in the Yerba Buena neighborhood. 'We've hired a new CTO in Siva Gurumurthy and a new Chief Business Officer in John Haddock and both of them have plans to hire talented individuals to join their team this year,' the company's spokesperson said in an email to the Chronicle on Tuesday. 'While we don't share lease details or specific hiring targets, the move will support both our San Francisco growth goals and our objective of building a great connected culture across our teams and a space where we can host Harvey customers.' Gurumurthy served as the head of engineering for Twitter, now known as X Corp., for six years prior to the pandemic. Haddock is a recent veteran of fintech Stripe. Last month, the three-year-old company announced that it raised $300 million at a $5 billion valuation in a Series E fundraising round — its backers include Kleiner Perkins, Coatue, Sequoia Capital and OpenAI. Named after the sharp-witted lead character in legal drama 'Suits,' Harvey was founded in 2022 by former antitrust litigator Winston Weinberg and Gabriel Pereyra, a former research scientist for Google DeepMind and machine learning engineer at Meta. The deal with Kilroy comes as a boost to the developer's 12-story Third Street building — and larger portfolio in San Francisco, which hasn't seen a deal of that size in years, according to the company's executives. Kilroy CEO Angela Aman said during an earnings call in May that a 57,000-square-foot lease renewal by data analytics company Amplitude, that was completed at that time, represented Kilroy's largest deal in the city since 2019. According to Kilroy's most recent quarterly financial report, just over 11% of its occupied space, or 1.9 million square feet, was available for sublease as of March 31, and a majority of those subleases were concentrated in the Bay Area. Overall vacancy in San Francisco's office market has been hovering at over 30% for several years now, but late last year began to dip for the first time since 2020, a positive trend that continued last quarter. San Francisco real estate firm CBRE has forecast that the city is on track to have its best leasing year since 2019, when 12.6 million square feet of office space was leased. Alexander Quinn, senior director of research for real estate firm JLL, said in a post to social media on Tuesday that the amount of space leased by AI companies in the Bay Area grew from 4.8 million square feet to 10.8 million square feet over the last two-and-a-half years.

Former D-Day pilot from Stourbridge featured in VE Day exhibition by Blind Veterans UK
Former D-Day pilot from Stourbridge featured in VE Day exhibition by Blind Veterans UK

ITV News

time04-05-2025

  • General
  • ITV News

Former D-Day pilot from Stourbridge featured in VE Day exhibition by Blind Veterans UK

A former D-Day pilot is one of 13 partially-sighted or blind veterans who have had their memories of VE Day brought back to life in an exhibition. Charity Blind Veterans UK has released the illustrations, stories and photographs as part of its After the Darkness campaign, which looks to recognise their service and raise funds for war heroes living with sight loss. Among the veterans' memories of VE Day were humorous drunken tales — including a commander in a dinghy and a sailor stripping off on a crane — alongside more poignant stories, such as a fatal flight after the war ended. D-Day pilot John Haddock, 102, from Stourbridge in the West Midlands, who was stationed in Scotland when it was announced the conflict would end, remembered the celebrations of his sozzled squadron. Mr Haddock said his commanding officer – Max Aitken, the son of the wartime aircraft production minister Lord Beaverbrook, got into a water dinghy and 'launched' himself into the airfield's static water pool, while his men splashed him. He added: 'It was all very schoolboy but provided much hilarity at the time.' Three days later, his squadron flew Crown Prince Olav to Norway after five years in exile, he said. The watercolour illustrations were created by Martin Impey, known for his artwork interpreting one of Wilfred Owen's war poems, who said he 'jumped at the chance' to get involved. He went on: 'It's so important that we commemorate this moment as one of the last times as a nation that we can show love, respect, and appreciation to a generation who gave so much for us all. It was an honour to connect with these heroes and to illustrate their memories of VE Day.' Claire Rowcliffe, director of engagement at Blind Veterans UK, said: 'As darkness descends and veterans find themselves losing their independence, they can often feel isolated, helpless, and unable to cope. 'Luckily our charity is here to help them regain their confidence and independence so they can live the fulfilled, meaningful lives they so deserve. 'Each story is unique and not necessarily what one would expect. Yes, there was joy, jubilation, and partying in the streets, but there was also mourning for those who had been lost, quickly changing societal roles, and fear of the dreaded war in the Pacific.' The thirteen veterans' stories, illustrations, and portraits are featured in a special exhibition at The Cartoon Museum in London, which runs until June 29.

Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life
Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life

The Herald Scotland

time03-05-2025

  • General
  • The Herald Scotland

Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life

Among the veterans' memories of VE Day were humorous drunken tales — including a commander in a dinghy and a sailor stripping off on a crane — alongside more poignant stories, such as a fatal flight after the war ended. John Haddock was stationed in Scotland on VE Day (Richard Cannon/Blind Veterans UK/PA) D-Day pilot John Haddock, 102, from Stourbridge in the West Midlands, who was stationed in Scotland when it was announced the conflict would end, remembered the celebrations of his sozzled squadron. Mr Haddock said his commanding officer – Max Aitken, the son of the wartime aircraft production minister Lord Beaverbrook, got into a water dinghy and 'launched' himself into the airfield's static water pool, while his men splashed him. He added: 'It was all very schoolboy but provided much hilarity at the time.' Three days later, his squadron flew Crown Prince Olav to Norway after five years in exile, he said. Mr Haddock said his commanding officer hurled himself into the airfield's static water pool (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Royal Navy veteran Les Sunter, 99, of Leeds, was in Gibraltar after returning from a convoy when he learned the war was over and the crew celebrated with a few drinks. He recalled a stoker from another ship climbing to the top of a big crane and stripping off and the other vessels putting their headlights on him. Mr Sunter said: 'He wasn't supposed to be up there, and there was a punishment waiting for him when he come down, but he'd had too much to drink, probably.' He added: 'Relief is a small word, but it was a hell of a size. It was a big word because it was the word everybody seemed to express. Relieved they got away with it.' Les Sunter said his crew celebrated with drinks (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/ PA) Joan Tanton, 100, of Cambridge, was serving in the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) in Italy when the war ended, saying she was 'thrilled to bits'. She flew back to England for a short leave, but her mother was ill and her scheduled return to Italy was delayed. The plane she was supposed to board crashed, killing 26 women. Mrs Tanton said: 'A total accident, down in the sea. And to think I was nearly on it. I often think what could have been if my mother hadn't been ill. My family wouldn't be here. I was very lucky.' Joan Tanton (centre), served with the Auxiliary Territorial Service (Collect/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Matt McKinnon-Pattison, 100, from Penrith in Cumbria, said he was behind enemy lines in the mountains of northern Italy when the war ended. He said: 'These things you didn't get told. It came through in drips and drabs, one way or another. Somebody would have a radio set and pick up a bit of news and then it would be passed down to you. 'There was no Army Colonel calling us all together and telling us, 'The war is now over'. That didn't happen.' He later joined the SAS and his regiment was given an order to find Benito Mussolini and take him to a British base, but the Italian dictator had been killed before they got to him. Matt McKinnon-Pattison (second left) with partisans in Italy in 1944 (Collect/Blind Veterans UK/PA) On VE Day, Peter Knight, 98, of Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, was a 17-year-old Royal Navy radar mechanic on the Isle of Man. Mr Knight was tasked with ensuring jubilant crowds in Douglas were behaving, saying it was 'quite a task'. He added: 'Everyone was so boisterous, and the idea that we could do anything about it was ridiculous. There were all these ladies coming up wishing to kiss our collars, which you do for luck, and the fish and chip shop was thrown wide open to feed us. It was absolute mayhem!' Peter Knight was a Royal Navy radar mechanic (Richard Cannon/Blind Veterans UK/PA) RAF pilot Derrick Grubb, 101, of Havant, Hampshire, while based in Italy in 1943, was shot down and captured as a prisoner of war and held for a year before he was forced to march hundreds of miles westwards as the German army retreated at the end of the war. He said: 'We heard the war was over, but we never heard of VE Day, as it was. 'I remember finally getting the bus home and knocking on the door – I couldn't tell my mother I was coming as they didn't have a telephone. 'When she opened the door, she shouted, 'He's here! He's here!'. There was a big 'Welcome Home Derrick' sign over the front door.' Derrick Grubb was captured as a prisoner of war (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Alice Wolynskyj, 99, from Warminster, Wiltshire, joined the Women's Royal Naval Service (Wrens) at 17 and was later assigned to secret work at Bletchley Park, operating Alan Turing's Bombe machines to help crack enemy codes. When VE Day came, she recalled: 'We couldn't believe it for a moment, and then… oh, we cried and laughed and danced down the corridor! No more night watch!' She added: 'Everyone was so happy. It was hardly believable. I mean, of course, the D-Day invasion raised everybody's hopes, but there was still some hard fighting across Europe. No one expected the war to end yet.' Alice Wolynskyj joined the Wrens aged 17 (Collect/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Arthur Harkness, 98, of Whitley Bay, Tyne and Wear, started training in the Royal Army Service Corps days before VE Day and remembered celebrating in Sheffield, where he first met Nancy, his wife of 71 years. Mr Harkness said: 'It was just a chance meeting, but that's when it all started.' He added: 'I'll be thinking about her this VE Day.' Arthur Harkness met his wife on VE Day (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Kenneth Smith, 98, of Houghton-le-Spring near Sunderland, was a young Royal Navy stoker when the war ended. He was drafted to Aberdeen and remembered that everyone was so 'merry and happy – they were celebrating in the streets'. Mr Smith recalled hanging out of a window and waving a flag, probably with a drink in his hand. Kenneth Smith was drafted to Aberdeen just before the end of the war was announced (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/PA) The next day, he was sent off to board a ship, taking newly liberated prisoners of war home to their families, and he recalled some 'terrible sights'. Mr Smith said: 'My worst experience was seeing the poor state those poor devils were in. How people can be so cruel in this world, I do not know.' He added: 'On the 80th anniversary of VE Day, I'll be thinking of my old mates who are no longer hanging about – the people I had trust in and who trusted me.' Mr Smith recalled some 'terrible sights' (Richard Cannon/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Joan Harding, 104, of Colchester, Essex, served in the ATS and cycled to a village pub to celebrate VE Day with her husband. She said: 'I was crying with sheer happiness. Everybody was happy. It was almost as if they'd suddenly seen a rainbow wrapped around them. It was all over!' Joan Harding cycled to the local village with her husband to join in celebrations at the village pub (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Neena Crossingham, of Heathfield, Sussex, who said she was one of nine ATS women with the Parachute Regiment, described her wartime service as the happiest time of her life. The 99-year-old said that though she was pleased the war ended, she felt deep sadness at parting from friends and the camaraderie. She said: 'Thinking of the anniversary makes me cry because… maybe it's feeling I want to go back to that time. I know people were being killed, but there was also a sense of togetherness.' Neena Crossingham enjoyed her wartime service (Collect/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Shortly before the war ended, Ruth Hayes, 99, of Welwyn Garden City, applied for the Women's Royal Naval Service in Ireland, receiving the reply on VE Day. She celebrated the end of the war in Lincolnshire with with her sister, boyfriend and friends under skies lit by bonfires, yet the joy was tempered by fears over the ongoing conflict in the Far East and recent losses at Arnhem. Ruth Hayes joined the celebrations in Lincolnshire on a picnic with her sister, boyfriend and friends (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/PA) D-Day veteran Thomas Cuthbert, 99, of Colchester, was on leave in Bethnal Green, east London, when he heard the war was over and his mother threw a street tea party. Mr Cuthbert later toasted VE Day with a few drinks back at his Isle of Wight barracks. He said: 'It makes me feel proud, what we did. I didn't want it to go on anymore – any further into the war – with more people dying. I had quite a few people die during the war.' Thomas Cuthbert (in naval uniform, standing front, centre left), beside his mother at the tea party (Collect/Blind Veterans UK/PA) The watercolour illustrations were created by Martin Impey, known for his artwork interpreting one of Wilfred Owen's war poems, who said he 'jumped at the chance' to get involved. He went on: 'It's so important that we commemorate this moment as one of the last times as a nation that we can show love, respect, and appreciation to a generation who gave so much for us all. It was an honour to connect with these heroes and to illustrate their memories of VE Day.' Martin Impey created the watercolour illustrations (Martin Impey/Blind Veterans UK/PA) Claire Rowcliffe, director of engagement at Blind Veterans UK, said: 'As darkness descends and veterans find themselves losing their independence, they can often feel isolated, helpless, and unable to cope. 'Luckily our charity is here to help them regain their confidence and independence so they can live the fulfilled, meaningful lives they so deserve. 'Each story is unique and not necessarily what one would expect. Yes, there was joy, jubilation, and partying in the streets, but there was also mourning for those who had been lost, quickly changing societal roles, and fear of the dreaded war in the Pacific.' The thirteen veterans' stories, illustrations, and portraits are featured in a special exhibition at The Cartoon Museum in London, which runs until June 29.

Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life
Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life

Powys County Times

time03-05-2025

  • General
  • Powys County Times

Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life

Thirteen partially sighted or blind veterans have had their memories of VE Day brought to life to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe. Charity Blind Veterans UK has released the illustrations, stories and photographs as part of its After the Darkness campaign, which looks to recognise their service and raise funds for war heroes living with sight loss. Among the veterans' memories of VE Day were humorous drunken tales — including a commander in a dinghy and a sailor stripping off on a crane — alongside more poignant stories, such as a fatal flight after the war ended. D-Day pilot John Haddock, 102, from Stourbridge in the West Midlands, who was stationed in Scotland when it was announced the conflict would end, remembered the celebrations of his sozzled squadron. Mr Haddock said his commanding officer – Max Aitken, the son of the wartime aircraft production minister Lord Beaverbrook, got into a water dinghy and 'launched' himself into the airfield's static water pool, while his men splashed him. He added: 'It was all very schoolboy but provided much hilarity at the time.' Three days later, his squadron flew Crown Prince Olav to Norway after five years in exile, he said. Royal Navy veteran Les Sunter, 99, of Leeds, was in Gibraltar after returning from a convoy when he learned the war was over and the crew celebrated with a few drinks. He recalled a stoker from another ship climbing to the top of a big crane and stripping off and the other vessels putting their headlights on him. Mr Sunter said: 'He wasn't supposed to be up there, and there was a punishment waiting for him when he come down, but he'd had too much to drink, probably.' He added: 'Relief is a small word, but it was a hell of a size. It was a big word because it was the word everybody seemed to express. Relieved they got away with it.' Joan Tanton, 100, of Cambridge, was serving in the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) in Italy when the war ended, saying she was 'thrilled to bits'. She flew back to England for a short leave, but her mother was ill and her scheduled return to Italy was delayed. The plane she was supposed to board crashed, killing 26 women. Mrs Tanton said: 'A total accident, down in the sea. And to think I was nearly on it. I often think what could have been if my mother hadn't been ill. My family wouldn't be here. I was very lucky.' Matt McKinnon-Pattison, 100, from Penrith in Cumbria, said he was behind enemy lines in the mountains of northern Italy when the war ended. He said: 'These things you didn't get told. It came through in drips and drabs, one way or another. Somebody would have a radio set and pick up a bit of news and then it would be passed down to you. 'There was no Army Colonel calling us all together and telling us, 'The war is now over'. That didn't happen.' He later joined the SAS and his regiment was given an order to find Benito Mussolini and take him to a British base, but the Italian dictator had been killed before they got to him. On VE Day, Peter Knight, 98, of Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, was a 17-year-old Royal Navy radar mechanic on the Isle of Man. Mr Knight was tasked with ensuring jubilant crowds in Douglas were behaving, saying it was 'quite a task'. He added: 'Everyone was so boisterous, and the idea that we could do anything about it was ridiculous. There were all these ladies coming up wishing to kiss our collars, which you do for luck, and the fish and chip shop was thrown wide open to feed us. It was absolute mayhem!' RAF pilot Derrick Grubb, 101, of Havant, Hampshire, while based in Italy in 1943, was shot down and captured as a prisoner of war and held for a year before he was forced to march hundreds of miles westwards as the German army retreated at the end of the war. He said: 'We heard the war was over, but we never heard of VE Day, as it was. 'I remember finally getting the bus home and knocking on the door – I couldn't tell my mother I was coming as they didn't have a telephone. 'When she opened the door, she shouted, 'He's here! He's here!'. There was a big 'Welcome Home Derrick' sign over the front door.' Alice Wolynskyj, 99, from Warminster, Wiltshire, joined the Women's Royal Naval Service (Wrens) at 17 and was later assigned to secret work at Bletchley Park, operating Alan Turing's Bombe machines to help crack enemy codes. When VE Day came, she recalled: 'We couldn't believe it for a moment, and then… oh, we cried and laughed and danced down the corridor! No more night watch!' She added: 'Everyone was so happy. It was hardly believable. I mean, of course, the D-Day invasion raised everybody's hopes, but there was still some hard fighting across Europe. No one expected the war to end yet.' Arthur Harkness, 98, of Whitley Bay, Tyne and Wear, started training in the Royal Army Service Corps days before VE Day and remembered celebrating in Sheffield, where he first met Nancy, his wife of 71 years. Mr Harkness said: 'It was just a chance meeting, but that's when it all started.' He added: 'I'll be thinking about her this VE Day.' Kenneth Smith, 98, of Houghton-le-Spring near Sunderland, was a young Royal Navy stoker when the war ended. He was drafted to Aberdeen and remembered that everyone was so 'merry and happy – they were celebrating in the streets'. Mr Smith recalled hanging out of a window and waving a flag, probably with a drink in his hand. The next day, he was sent off to board a ship, taking newly liberated prisoners of war home to their families, and he recalled some 'terrible sights'. Mr Smith said: 'My worst experience was seeing the poor state those poor devils were in. How people can be so cruel in this world, I do not know.' He added: 'On the 80th anniversary of VE Day, I'll be thinking of my old mates who are no longer hanging about – the people I had trust in and who trusted me.' Joan Harding, 104, of Colchester, Essex, served in the ATS and cycled to a village pub to celebrate VE Day with her husband. She said: 'I was crying with sheer happiness. Everybody was happy. It was almost as if they'd suddenly seen a rainbow wrapped around them. It was all over!' Neena Crossingham, of Heathfield, Sussex, who said she was one of nine ATS women with the Parachute Regiment, described her wartime service as the happiest time of her life. The 99-year-old said that though she was pleased the war ended, she felt deep sadness at parting from friends and the camaraderie. She said: 'Thinking of the anniversary makes me cry because… maybe it's feeling I want to go back to that time. I know people were being killed, but there was also a sense of togetherness.' Shortly before the war ended, Ruth Hayes, 99, of Welwyn Garden City, applied for the Women's Royal Naval Service in Ireland, receiving the reply on VE Day. She celebrated the end of the war in Lincolnshire with with her sister, boyfriend and friends under skies lit by bonfires, yet the joy was tempered by fears over the ongoing conflict in the Far East and recent losses at Arnhem. D-Day veteran Thomas Cuthbert, 99, of Colchester, was on leave in Bethnal Green, east London, when he heard the war was over and his mother threw a street tea party. Mr Cuthbert later toasted VE Day with a few drinks back at his Isle of Wight barracks. He said: 'It makes me feel proud, what we did. I didn't want it to go on anymore – any further into the war – with more people dying. I had quite a few people die during the war.' The watercolour illustrations were created by Martin Impey, known for his artwork interpreting one of Wilfred Owen's war poems, who said he 'jumped at the chance' to get involved. He went on: 'It's so important that we commemorate this moment as one of the last times as a nation that we can show love, respect, and appreciation to a generation who gave so much for us all. It was an honour to connect with these heroes and to illustrate their memories of VE Day.' Claire Rowcliffe, director of engagement at Blind Veterans UK, said: 'As darkness descends and veterans find themselves losing their independence, they can often feel isolated, helpless, and unable to cope. 'Luckily our charity is here to help them regain their confidence and independence so they can live the fulfilled, meaningful lives they so deserve. 'Each story is unique and not necessarily what one would expect. Yes, there was joy, jubilation, and partying in the streets, but there was also mourning for those who had been lost, quickly changing societal roles, and fear of the dreaded war in the Pacific.' The thirteen veterans' stories, illustrations, and portraits are featured in a special exhibition at The Cartoon Museum in London, which runs until June 29.

Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life
Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life

Yahoo

time03-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Second World War veterans have memories of VE Day brought to life

Thirteen partially sighted or blind veterans have had their memories of VE Day brought to life to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe. Charity Blind Veterans UK has released the illustrations, stories and photographs as part of its After the Darkness campaign, which looks to recognise their service and raise funds for war heroes living with sight loss. Among the veterans' memories of VE Day were humorous drunken tales — including a commander in a dinghy and a sailor stripping off on a crane — alongside more poignant stories, such as a fatal flight after the war ended. D-Day pilot John Haddock, 102, from Stourbridge in the West Midlands, who was stationed in Scotland when it was announced the conflict would end, remembered the celebrations of his sozzled squadron. Mr Haddock said his commanding officer – Max Aitken, the son of the wartime aircraft production minister Lord Beaverbrook, got into a water dinghy and 'launched' himself into the airfield's static water pool, while his men splashed him. He added: 'It was all very schoolboy but provided much hilarity at the time.' Three days later, his squadron flew Crown Prince Olav to Norway after five years in exile, he said. Royal Navy veteran Les Sunter, 99, of Leeds, was in Gibraltar after returning from a convoy when he learned the war was over and the crew celebrated with a few drinks. He recalled a stoker from another ship climbing to the top of a big crane and stripping off and the other vessels putting their headlights on him. Mr Sunter said: 'He wasn't supposed to be up there, and there was a punishment waiting for him when he come down, but he'd had too much to drink, probably.' He added: 'Relief is a small word, but it was a hell of a size. It was a big word because it was the word everybody seemed to express. Relieved they got away with it.' Joan Tanton, 100, of Cambridge, was serving in the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) in Italy when the war ended, saying she was 'thrilled to bits'. She flew back to England for a short leave, but her mother was ill and her scheduled return to Italy was delayed. The plane she was supposed to board crashed, killing 26 women. Mrs Tanton said: 'A total accident, down in the sea. And to think I was nearly on it. I often think what could have been if my mother hadn't been ill. My family wouldn't be here. I was very lucky.' Matt McKinnon-Pattison, 100, from Penrith in Cumbria, said he was behind enemy lines in the mountains of northern Italy when the war ended. He said: 'These things you didn't get told. It came through in drips and drabs, one way or another. Somebody would have a radio set and pick up a bit of news and then it would be passed down to you. 'There was no Army Colonel calling us all together and telling us, 'The war is now over'. That didn't happen.' He later joined the SAS and his regiment was given an order to find Benito Mussolini and take him to a British base, but the Italian dictator had been killed before they got to him. On VE Day, Peter Knight, 98, of Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, was a 17-year-old Royal Navy radar mechanic on the Isle of Man. Mr Knight was tasked with ensuring jubilant crowds in Douglas were behaving, saying it was 'quite a task'. He added: 'Everyone was so boisterous, and the idea that we could do anything about it was ridiculous. There were all these ladies coming up wishing to kiss our collars, which you do for luck, and the fish and chip shop was thrown wide open to feed us. It was absolute mayhem!' RAF pilot Derrick Grubb, 101, of Havant, Hampshire, while based in Italy in 1943, was shot down and captured as a prisoner of war and held for a year before he was forced to march hundreds of miles westwards as the German army retreated at the end of the war. He said: 'We heard the war was over, but we never heard of VE Day, as it was. 'I remember finally getting the bus home and knocking on the door – I couldn't tell my mother I was coming as they didn't have a telephone. 'When she opened the door, she shouted, 'He's here! He's here!'. There was a big 'Welcome Home Derrick' sign over the front door.' Alice Wolynskyj, 99, from Warminster, Wiltshire, joined the Women's Royal Naval Service (Wrens) at 17 and was later assigned to secret work at Bletchley Park, operating Alan Turing's Bombe machines to help crack enemy codes. When VE Day came, she recalled: 'We couldn't believe it for a moment, and then… oh, we cried and laughed and danced down the corridor! No more night watch!' She added: 'Everyone was so happy. It was hardly believable. I mean, of course, the D-Day invasion raised everybody's hopes, but there was still some hard fighting across Europe. No one expected the war to end yet.' Arthur Harkness, 98, of Whitley Bay, Tyne and Wear, started training in the Royal Army Service Corps days before VE Day and remembered celebrating in Sheffield, where he first met Nancy, his wife of 71 years. Mr Harkness said: 'It was just a chance meeting, but that's when it all started.' He added: 'I'll be thinking about her this VE Day.' Kenneth Smith, 98, of Houghton-le-Spring near Sunderland, was a young Royal Navy stoker when the war ended. He was drafted to Aberdeen and remembered that everyone was so 'merry and happy – they were celebrating in the streets'. Mr Smith recalled hanging out of a window and waving a flag, probably with a drink in his hand. The next day, he was sent off to board a ship, taking newly liberated prisoners of war home to their families, and he recalled some 'terrible sights'. Mr Smith said: 'My worst experience was seeing the poor state those poor devils were in. How people can be so cruel in this world, I do not know.' He added: 'On the 80th anniversary of VE Day, I'll be thinking of my old mates who are no longer hanging about – the people I had trust in and who trusted me.' Joan Harding, 104, of Colchester, Essex, served in the ATS and cycled to a village pub to celebrate VE Day with her husband. She said: 'I was crying with sheer happiness. Everybody was happy. It was almost as if they'd suddenly seen a rainbow wrapped around them. It was all over!' Neena Crossingham, of Heathfield, Sussex, who said she was one of nine ATS women with the Parachute Regiment, described her wartime service as the happiest time of her life. The 99-year-old said that though she was pleased the war ended, she felt deep sadness at parting from friends and the camaraderie. She said: 'Thinking of the anniversary makes me cry because… maybe it's feeling I want to go back to that time. I know people were being killed, but there was also a sense of togetherness.' Shortly before the war ended, Ruth Hayes, 99, of Welwyn Garden City, applied for the Women's Royal Naval Service in Ireland, receiving the reply on VE Day. She celebrated the end of the war in Lincolnshire with with her sister, boyfriend and friends under skies lit by bonfires, yet the joy was tempered by fears over the ongoing conflict in the Far East and recent losses at Arnhem. D-Day veteran Thomas Cuthbert, 99, of Colchester, was on leave in Bethnal Green, east London, when he heard the war was over and his mother threw a street tea party. Mr Cuthbert later toasted VE Day with a few drinks back at his Isle of Wight barracks. He said: 'It makes me feel proud, what we did. I didn't want it to go on anymore – any further into the war – with more people dying. I had quite a few people die during the war.' The watercolour illustrations were created by Martin Impey, known for his artwork interpreting one of Wilfred Owen's war poems, who said he 'jumped at the chance' to get involved. He went on: 'It's so important that we commemorate this moment as one of the last times as a nation that we can show love, respect, and appreciation to a generation who gave so much for us all. It was an honour to connect with these heroes and to illustrate their memories of VE Day.' Claire Rowcliffe, director of engagement at Blind Veterans UK, said: 'As darkness descends and veterans find themselves losing their independence, they can often feel isolated, helpless, and unable to cope. 'Luckily our charity is here to help them regain their confidence and independence so they can live the fulfilled, meaningful lives they so deserve. 'Each story is unique and not necessarily what one would expect. Yes, there was joy, jubilation, and partying in the streets, but there was also mourning for those who had been lost, quickly changing societal roles, and fear of the dreaded war in the Pacific.' The thirteen veterans' stories, illustrations, and portraits are featured in a special exhibition at The Cartoon Museum in London, which runs until June 29.

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