Veteran, 100, recalls 'getting squiffy' on VE day

Royal British Legion handout World War Two and D-Day veteran Tom Berry, 100, has grey hair and is wearing silver glasses, a white vest, grey checked shirt and grey v-neck jumper. Mr Berry is sitting in a kitchen.Royal British Legion handout
Veteran Tom Berry says HMS Tartar became known as the Lucky Tartar for her many narrow escapes from danger

A 100-year-old World War Two naval veteran has recalled "getting a bit squiffy" as he turned 21 amid the VE Day celebrations on his ship.

Tom Berry, who was born and raised in Liverpool but now lives in Macclesfield, Cheshire, was a teenager when he joined the Royal Navy as a radio operator on the Tribal-class destroyer HMS Tartar.

She became known as the Lucky Tartar for her many narrow escapes from danger during the war.

Speaking ahead of the 80th anniversary of VE Day on Thursday, Mr Berry described celebrating his 21st birthday a day early, saying he and his crewmates "got an extra tot of rum".

He said: "The captain came on to the deck and addressed the crew to let us know that the war was over in Europe.

"The Admiralty ordered us to 'splice the mainbrace', which is basically an order to have a drink!

"Because it was my birthday, I got more than most and got a bit squiffy."

Nazi Germany surrendered to the Allies, ending almost six years of conflict in Europe, on 8 May 1945.

The Royal British Legion will bring together World War Two veterans at an anniversary tea party and remembrance service at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire.

'Lucky man, lucky ship'

Mr Berry, who will turn 101 on Friday, said he "hopes everyone joins in the spirit of the celebrations the Royal British Legion is laying on for the country".

He said he "doesn't consider himself a hero" but rather a "lucky man on a lucky ship".

HMS Tartar was one of only four destroyers to survive the war out of the 16 that started it.

Mr Berry said one of the Lucky Tartar's closest scrapes happened on D-Day in June 1944, when the largest amphibious invasion in history began the liberation of western Europe from Nazi occupation.

He said: "Our orders were to shell the German emplacements to allow the troops to land in Normandy – I felt very sorry for those poor soldiers heading into the unknown.

"After the troops moved further inland we patrolled the Channel and sank two German destroyers, but they returned fire and shot our main mast away.

"The galley and the bridge caught fire and we lost four men in that incident before limping back to Plymouth."

Royal British Legion handout Photograph of Tom Berry, taken in 1943,  during his naval training in Skegness, Lincolnshire. He is pictured wearing his navy uniform.Royal British Legion handout
Veteran Tom Berry said he "doesn't consider himself a hero"

After victory in Europe, the war continued for the Lucky Tartar in the Asia-Pacific theatre.

Mr Berry recalled being "a bit miffed" because of "all this celebrating in the UK" while he and the crew were "still being shot at".

"In the Far East we did have one particular encounter with a Japanese cruiser which was very heavily armed – we could only fire about five miles (away) but their range was seven or eight.

"It was a tense time, but we kept going," he said.

The end of the war came for Mr Berry on 2 September 1945, when the Lucky Tartar was present at the signing of the Japanese surrender in Tokyo Bay.

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