IT has taken eight decades but the last D-Day battle has finally been won.
More than 22,000 men and women gave their lives in the battle of Normandy, which began 77 years ago tomorrow.
But for more than half a century, their comrades who came home have been campaigning for a British memorial in northern France to remember those who gave their lives.
Tomorrow, on the anniversary of D-Day when 4,300 died in the opening hours of the invasion, 110 veterans will watch the unveiling of the British Normandy Memorial.
Carved into it will be the names of every serviceman and woman, aged from 16 to 64, who died in northern France.
Because of Covid restrictions the veterans, who are now all well into their 90s, cannot go to Ver-sur-Mer, near Arromanches, on the Normandy coast.
Instead, the survivors and 170 descendants of the dead will attend a special ceremony at National Memorial Arboretum in Burton-on-Trent, Staffs, where the official opening will be broadcast live from France.
Among them will be Bernard Morgan who, at 20, was the youngest RAF sergeant to go ashore on D-Day with 483 Group Control Centre.
Now 97, he says: “I was one of the lucky ones to survive. Waiting on our landing ship tank, I was in charge of a bren gun for two hours under a hail of shells.
“I lost three wireless operators in Normandy — two were 19 and one was 20.
“I pray I will live long enough to go to France one more time to see their names on the walls at the British memorial.”
Bernard was a cypher operator with a mobile unit that followed the front line in a Bedford truck, sending signals to air crew attacking fleeing German units. And 77 years on, Bernard is still haunted by the horrors of D-Day.
He says: “There were hundreds of bodies on the beach. It was the first time I’d seen a dead body.”
On July 14, his pal Aircraftman 1st Class John Baines, 21, was killed by friendly fire.
A week later Leading Aircraftman Paul Langstaff, 20, and Robert Hall, 22, died in an air attack on their truck.
Bernard will remember them tomorrow when he reads from Stephen Ambrose’s book D-Day and tells the ceremony: “They were the soldiers of democracy.”
Prince Charles, royal patron of the £30million appeal, will also send a video message to the event, organised by the Royal British Legion.
The stunning Normandy memorial, made from 3,700 tonnes of stone, is built on 50 acres of land.
Its 160 pillars list the name of every fatality in the order they fell during the battle, which lasted from June 6 until late August 1944.
Near a statue of soldiers storming the beach, an inscription on a 7ft-high stone wall reads: “They died so that Europe might be free.”
Incredibly, Britain, which sent 160,000 men to Normandy, was the only country among the Allies not to have a national memorial in France.
George Batts, an 18-year-old Sapper on D-Day, who became national secretary of the Normandy Veterans Association, said: “We lost a lot of our mates on those beaches.
“Now, at long last, Britain has a fitting memorial to them.”
Broadcaster Nicholas Witchell, co-founder of the Normandy Memorial Trust, said: “This memorial will stand as a reminder to future generations of the sacrifice made by British forces in Normandy.”
British Ambassador to France, Lord Edward Llewellyn, will lead the official opening in France.
Coverage, including the Royal British Legion’s service of remembrance at The Bayeux Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery, will be live-streamed on the British Normandy Memorial and Royal British Legion websites, as well as on Sky News and BBC News 24.
Surviving D-Day heroes can finally see fallen comrades’ names on memorial
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June 04, 2021
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