WW2's oldest veteran attends VE Day memorial event

PA Media Two women and a man sit at a table with flags and cakes as a tea party is held at the National Memorial Arboretum during VE Day.PA Media
PA Media People sit around a table with cups of tea and plates of food. PA Media

A tea party was held at the National Memorial Arboretum on VE Day
Some 46 veterans and their families attended the event

Britain's oldest surviving World War Two veteran and one of the country's oldest living couples were among dozens who marked the 80th anniversary of VE Day at the National Memorial Arboretum.

Up to 46 veterans and their families attended the memorial event in Alrewas, Staffordshire, as a service and tea party were held in their honour.

D-Day veteran Donald Rose, who celebrated his 110th birthday on Christmas Eve, was one of those at the event.

He was attached to the division that liberated the concentration camp in Belsen, Germany, and had been unable to take part in celebrations on 8 May 1845.

"When I heard that the armistice had been signed 80 years ago, I was in Germany at Belsen and like most active soldiers, I didn't get to celebrate at that time," he said.

PA Media A veteran wearing a beret and a number of medals on a blue jacket, sits smiling in a wheelchair.PA Media
D-Day veteran Donald Rose, 110, was among those in attendance

Upon hearing the news the war had ended in Europe, he said it came as a "relief" to him and his fellow soldiers.

"I never would have believed I would be remembering this day at 110-years-old," he explained.

"It's meaningful to come here today with the Royal British Legion, to remember the people who didn't come back."

Also attending the event were Roy Lawrence, 100, and his wife Kathleen, 101, who both served in the RAF during World War Two, from 1942 to 1945.

PA Media An elderly man and woman sitting in wheelchairs kiss as the man holds a bunch of flowers in his left hand.PA Media
Roy Lawrence, 100, and his wife Kathleen, 101, served in the RAF during World War Two

Mr Lawrence was a flight engineer on a Lancaster bomber, while Mrs Lawrence was working in a factory before joining the WRAF in 1941, serving in communications.

Asked why it was important that people remember the sacrifices made, Mr Lawrence said: "It's very difficult. I remember those days and I remember the people, not by name because there were so many of them, that got killed.

"The present day need to remember that had it not been for them, we'd have all been speaking German."

A two-minute silence was held at the memorial at midday before the tea party and commemoration service, organised by the Royal British Legion, took place in the afternoon.

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