RETURNING HEROES

D-Day veterans brim with pride and emotion as they head back to the scene of their finest hour

The veterans were marking the 80th anniversary of D-Day

EIGHTY years after they first sailed to Normandy to liberate France a tiny band of brothers returned yesterday.

Former RAF Sergeant Bernard Morgan and Jeep driver Jack Mortimer, both 100, were among 23 D-Day veterans who sailed from Portsmouth yesterday.

Advertisement
D-Day veterans were overcome with emotion as they made the journey to Normandy once again
Well-wishers waved Union Jack flags as D-Day veterans travelled from England to Caen

As the 8am ferry sailed out into the Solent sailors lined the decks of aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales to cheer on the last of the D-Day heroes.

Crowds flocked to the sea front and traffic came to halt as the Type 23 frigate St Albans and HMS Cattistock escorted the veterans travelling to France to mark the 80th anniversary of the battle for Nomandy when 22,442 Brits died.

Overhead a giant RAF A400 aircraft flew three times around the ship.

On D-Day, June 6, 1944, Jack, from Leeds, drove a jeep on to Sword Beach as a 20-year-old serving with the Royal Army Ordnance Corps

Advertisement

He fought back tears as he recalled shells and mortars flying over him as he drove towards Caen.

He says: “It was dangerous, there were snipers all around. It was noisy, smoky, smelly and I saw lots of casualties. I saw bodies being brought off that beach.

“But I'm proud of being a D-Day veteran. I'm proud of my medals.

“How does it feel to be going back 80 years later?

Advertisement

Most read in The Sun

BOOZE WARNING
Holiday warning as 5 killed including Brit lawyer in 'fake booze poisoning'
baby joy
Ashley Cain set to become a father again after tragic loss of daughter
CORNERED RAT
Putin may unleash CHEMICAL weapons after losing Kursk, says ex-Nato commander
PERFECT SEND-OFF
Liam’s funeral was ‘hardest day of Cheryl’s life’ as family gave readings

“I've been back a few times to Normandy and it is very, very emotional.

“When I go past those gravestones, I talk to them in silence. Sometimes I read their names and remember them. The memories are our keepsake.”

RAF code breaker Bernard Morgan, from Crewe, Cheshire, manned a Bren gun on a landing craft on D-Day.

The King and Queen had an emotional face-to-face with D-Day heroes who described their wartime heroics in Buckingham Palace

He finally reached the shore at 6.30pm on D-Day – the worst of the fighting was over but dead bodies lay everywhere.

Advertisement

He says: “Gold Beach was one of the better landing points on D-Day, but I can still vividly remember seeing dead bodies scattered all over the beach as I came ashore and that is a sight that will stay with me forever.”

Bernard will remember three pals he lost in the battle for Normandy - wireless operator John Baines, killed by friendly fire, plus Robert Hall and Paul Langstaff who died in an air attack on their truck.

Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com