VE Day celebrations like 'nothing I'd ever seen'

Gemma Sherlock
BBC News, North East and Cumbria
BBC An old man with glasses, looks at the camera, as he sits in front of large poster. The poster has a blue sky background with red poppies on it and silhoutees of soldiers, with British flags. It reads 'lest we forget' and 'VE DAY 1945-2025- 8 MAY'BBC
Kenneth Johnson said he remembered everyone waltzing and snake dancing

"It was like nothing I'd ever seen," 102-year-old RAF veteran Kenneth Johnson said of the VE Day celebrations in 1945.

He is one of thousands across the north-east of England and Cumbria commemorating the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two in Europe.

Services and parties have taken place across the region, including parades in Redcar and the unveiling of a poppy art installation in Windermere, ahead of the lighting of beacons as part of a national hilltop ceremony.

"Everyone was waltzing and snake dancing [conga lines] - it seems quite silly now," Mr Johnson remembers.

PA Media Crowds of women, men and children, stand on a street waving British flags.PA Media
Huge crowds took to the streets on 8 May 1945 to sing, dance and rejoice after nearly six years of war

Mr Johnson, from Darlington, "broke out" of his barracks near Aylesbury to attend the Victory in Europe Day celebrations.

After enjoying themselves, Mr Johnson said he and his fellow comrades spent the night in an "underground shelter" and the following morning attempted to "sneak back" to their barracks.

"When we got off the train we saw the Red Hats [military police] were waiting at the station, they grabbed a few lads but we ran and hid," he said.

After getting back to the aerodrome base, Mr Johnson realised they were not the only ones to have left so he escaped disciplinary action.

He was 23 when the war in Europe ended and admits of feeling a sense of "relief" on hearing the news, but the memories are still there.

"The war was a terrible, I hope it's remembered, not what I did, because greater people played their parts than me."

George Young, an older man, looks to the right of the camera, wearing a blue jumper, shirt and tie as he sits in a living room. A table with a family photograph sits beside him to his left.
Veteran George Young said he lost four years of his young life serving in World War Two

One hundred-year-old George Young, from Amble, was stationed in Sri Lanka with the RAF during World War Two.

He now spends his time with his family playing golf, but told BBC Radio Newcastle how he still remembered his years spent in service.

"Height of winter, freezing conditions, storms, wind, anything could have happened," he said.

"I lost four years of my young life. I'd just joined the Amble golf club as a boy but the war started, the army moved in."

Mr Young was called up for service at the age of 18.

He said: "I remember firing a Sten gun, throwing a live hand grenade and on the passing out parade, we were the smartest guardsmen.

"There aren't many of us left so it is good to have a record of what did happen."

BBC / Stuart Whincup A group of older men and one woman at the front, wearing royal service uniform, march with flags on a beach promenade. BBC / Stuart Whincup
Service men and women took part in a parade shortly after a service was held in Redcar

Parades and services have taken place across the North East, including in Redcar, where hundreds of veterans and service men and women walked from the boating lake to Redcar Beacon.

At Carlisle Cathedral, a service of choral evensong concluded at 18:30 BST with the ringing of the cathedral bells as part of the national "Ring Out In Celebration".

It mirrored the moment on 8 May 1945, when bells rang out across Britain as the nation took to the streets in celebration.

Ed Hanson / BBC A group of men and women in a church bell tower, reaching up to large ropes hanging down from the ceiling. It is brightly lit from church windows.Ed Hanson / BBC
Carlisle Cathedral bell ringers during the VE Day ceremony

Elsewhere in Cumbria, primary school children marked the occasion by dressing as war evacuees.

Briony, a pupil at Windermere's St Martin and St Mary Church of England Primary, said VE Day was about "remembering all of the soldiers who gave up their lives for all of us and tried helping us live in peace".

Fellow pupil Noah said: "Soldiers, and not just soldiers but other people, have tried to make this world a better place for us to live in so we don't have to live in more world wars."

The students were also part of a project in which four Windermere schools helped create 4ft (1.2m) poppies under the guidance of artist, Donna Campbell.

Five children look down at wooden crosses, with poppies on, sitting on a stone with etched names in.
Children in Windermere have been commemorating those who lost their lives

They have been installed in various locations in the town, including at the war memorial where a short service was held for VE Day.

A beacon ceremony took place in Windermere, held on the summit of Orrest Head, as part of a national network of hilltop beacons.

Two giant knitted poppies appear either side of bushes and a stone entrance, leading to a war memorial which has smaller, knitted poppies cascading down from it.
The knitted poppies at Windermere war memorial

On Tyneside, Lord Mayor of Newcastle, councillor Rob Higgins, lit the flambeau beacons in the city, while hundreds gathered to get their spot in the square for the lighting ceremony in Keel Square, in Sunderland.

BBC / Jim Scott A group of servicemen and veterans stand by a black tower which has an open flame on top of it. Two men at either side hold British flags. BBC / Jim Scott
Servicemen and veterans at the beacon ceremony in Sunderland

Joanne Willis and Michelle Jenkins, both from Sunderland, arrived in Keel Square on Thursday morning.

They told the BBC they were "excited to be here".

Two women sit on deckchairs in a town square, with others around them, both are smiling and waving British flags.
Joanne Willis and Michelle Jenkins were in Keel Square for most of the day

Beverley Thirwell and her mother Eileen Thirwell also grabbed their seats for the ceremony.

Eileen was alive during World War Two and remembers the original VE Day when she was just 14.

"It was lovely, everybody was singing," she said.

An elderly woman wearing a hat, grey fleece and blanket, sits in a wheelchair, next to another woman who is sat in a deckchair in a square outside, with two dogs on her lap.
Eileen Thirwell and her daughter Beverley were primed for their spot in Keel Square

At Sunderland Fire Station, an anniversary concert took place where hundreds of knitted poppies were dropped from each side of the auditorium's balcony.

Each poppy had been knitted by the member of the Wearside community, including schools, care homes, Sunderland College and the Women's Institute.

As part of the national beacon lighting ceremony, beacons in Northumberland, County Durham, Hexham, Blyth and South Tyneside were also lit.

Additional reporting by Andrew Watson, Phil Chapman and Jim Scott.

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