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Trefin to host series of events to mark VE Day anniversary
Trefin to host series of events to mark VE Day anniversary

Western Telegraph

time29-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Western Telegraph

Trefin to host series of events to mark VE Day anniversary

Trefin and nearby areas will hold a series of activities on Thursday, May 8, ending with the lighting of a beacon. These events will mirror those happening across the UK, marking the end of World War II in Europe on May 8. The day's programme will kick off in the village centre at 9am with the reading of the VE 80 Day proclamation, "Together We Stand." This will be followed by the raising of the unique VE 80 Day flag, in remembrance of the sacrifices made by millions during World War II. At noon, in Trefin Square, piper Lance Corporal Spencer from Cawdor Barracks will play a specially composed tune for the occasion, entitled "Celebratum." At 6.30pm, Llanrhian Church bell will ring in unison with other participating cathedrals and churches across Wales and the UK. In Trefin Square, the Lamp Light of Peace will be blessed, and hand bells will be rung by adults and children, dressed for the occasion. Prizes will be awarded for the best costumes. The Ship Inn, Trefin, will host the early evening celebrations. A fish and chip supper will be available, but must be booked and paid for in advance. There will also be displays of various wartime memorabilia. The celebrations will continue at around 8pm in the field known as Penlac, overlooking the coast. The official Women's Institute VE 80 Day Orange and Ginger cake will be on offer, and music from the era will be played. Cor y Felin, the local community choir, will lead the singing of several well-known wartime songs. Representatives from each decade since the end of the war will read the VE 80 Day Global Tribute, alongside others around the world. A minute's silence will be held in honour of those who did not return home, followed by a bugler playing the Last Post and Reveille, and the piper playing Flowers of the Forest. At 9.30pm, the community will join nearly 1,000 choirs across the UK in singing the hymn I Vow to Thee My Country. The Coastal Beacon, part of the official chain of beacons around the UK and the world, will be lit at 9.30pm. The Lamplight of Peace will also be lit at the same time. The Ship Inn will be open for those wishing to continue the celebrations. Everyone is welcome to join in across the day, and the organisers encourage attendees to dress in wartime-style clothing. The Gwelliant Trefin Improvement Group has organised the events.

Newport Council plans for VE Day celebrations include beacon
Newport Council plans for VE Day celebrations include beacon

South Wales Argus

time26-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South Wales Argus

Newport Council plans for VE Day celebrations include beacon

On Thursday, May 8, the day will begin with the raising of the VE Day flag outside the civic centre. The day will end with the lighting of the VE Day beacon at Queen Elizabeth Field, Ringland. The beacon event will start at 7.30pm, with Anthony Stuart-Lloyd, a former West End star and international opera singer, serving as the evening's host. Musical entertainment will be provided by the Gwent Music Community Celtic Group, Gwent Music Brass Ensemble, and the City of Newport Male Choir. The beacon will be lit at around 9.30pm, followed by the lighting of the Lamp Light of Peace. The Queen Elizabeth II field offers a view across the Bristol Channel, allowing attendees to see other beacons from a distance. Newport will join over 1,000 beacons and hundreds of Lamp Lights of Peace shining throughout the UK, Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man. The flames will symbolise the 'light of peace' following the darkness of war. Further details of official events can be found at

Lady Janes MacRae - the Scottish piper playing for the King on VE Day
Lady Janes MacRae - the Scottish piper playing for the King on VE Day

BBC News

time18-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Lady Janes MacRae - the Scottish piper playing for the King on VE Day

Meet Lady Jane has a PhD in maths, is a former concert pianist and has an impressive golf handicap of just all those strings to her bow, you might be surprised to hear that in 2020 she decided to take up another hobby – the forward four and a half years and the grandmother of four, who describes herself as a "jack of all trades, master of none", will be playing for the King at this year's VE Day (Victory in Europe) take on a key ceremonial role in the event marking 80 years since the Allied victory over Nazi Germany in 1945. Lady MacRae will be playing a song that's been composed specifically for this event, named provide the soundtrack as a flame is put to the Lamp Light of Peace, representing an end to the darkness of I'm treated to a rendition of the song by the River Dee, after arriving at her 150-acre Aberdeenshire estate. But after a while, with her playing fingers getting cold in the February chill, it's inside for a swift tour of Lady MacRae's stately home (which she calls her castle) before a chat in the Grand turns to the big day on the 8th of May. She concedes that she'll be "shaking in my boots" when she's playing to the audience – including the how does a maths teacher (who's still working) find the time to learn the bagpipes?Lady MacRae explains that someone once told her that they didn't think she'd be able to master the instrument. "That was a red rag to a bull" she explains."If someone says I can't do something, then I do it." This may have started out as a mission to prove a doubter wrong, but Lady MacRae admits that she's now "hooked" on the pipes. She regularly gets up at 5am to here in rural Aberdeenshire, she doesn't have any neighbours to upset with early-morning insists that it's never too late to pick up a new skill, telling me "anyone can do anything that they want, they just have to set their mind to it".Both her parents served in World War Two, so there's a personal element to being asked to perform at the 80th commemoration of VE is likely to be the last significant event featuring veterans from the conflict – the Ministry of Defence estimates anyone who fought will now be at least 98 years MacRae believes these commemorations are about more than simply acknowledging the past. She worries that younger generations aren't aware of the lessons of World War Two."We've got to keep talking about it", she says, expressing concern that all-out European war feels like a worrying prospect once so she takes that message with her in the evenings when she's teaching her bagpipe class at the Banchory Royal British Legion right. She's only been playing four years but is now already teaching others. I sat in on a session where she was walking pupils aged between seven and 82 through the playing of before the practice session on the chanter (a small part of the bagpipe) Lady MacRae explained the significance of VE official events to mark the occasion may become rarer as time goes on, but she insists that it's a date that must continue to be official road to 2025's commemoration starts today, and this offers Lady MacRae plenty of opportunity for be playing Celebratum at Crathes Castle in Aberdeenshire to kick off an 80-day countdown to the main will be piping sessions across Scotland every day until 8 May as part of this process. The Banchory Pipe Band – who she teaches - will be playing in the town centre at one of these the main commemoration at St Paul's Cathedral is out of the way, you'd be forgiven for thinking Lady MacRae might take a well-earned no, she's got her sights set on a new challenge. Learning the hard can it be?

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