UK Veterans Commemorate 82nd D-Day Anniversary with Updated Memorial
Quick Look
82 years after D-Day, surviving UK veterans commemorate the Allied invasion of Normandy as 98 new names are added to the British Normandy Memorial, honoring troops previously unlisted due to inaccurate records.
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Why It Matters
D-Day marked the beginning of the liberation of Western Europe from Nazi Germany.
Some of the last surviving UK veterans are commemorating the anniversary of D-Day, 82 years since the allied invasion of northern France in World War Two. The huge operation, which took place on 6 June 1944, saw British, American and Canadian troops storm beaches along the Normandy coastline to begin the liberation of France from Nazi occupation. This year's commemorative events are the first since nearly 100 more names were added to the British Normandy Memorial, which lists troops who died in the campaign. "To most people coming here they're just a series of names," 100-year-old veteran Kenneth Hay told the BBC. "To people like myself, they're people, I can see their faces." At the British Normandy Memorial above what was known as Gold Beach in 1944, an extra 98 names have been added to its roll of honour. Research has uncovered men who fought in the battle - but inaccurate records meant their names were not carved onto the memorial's walls - until now. In some cases, families have managed to provide evidence that a relative was killed in Normandy, while in others men who were mortally wounded there but died in hospital back in Britain were also left off the original lists. He was mortally wounded in Normandy, but his death in a British hospital meant he had not been formally commemorated. Cecil's son John told the BBC "I was really pleased, I cried" after he learned his campaign to have his father's name added had been recognised. "It's a strange mixture of being glad and happy and sad at the same time," John said, as he touched the stone where his father's name was now inscribed. This year will see the smallest number of Normandy veterans to have attended the ceremony since the memorial opened in 2021, with only six confirmed to be attending. D-Day was the largest seaborne military operation ever attempted and marked the start of the campaign to liberate Nazi-occupied north-western Europe. It involved the simultaneous landing of tens of thousands of troops on five separate beaches in Normandy. More than a year in the planning, D-Day was originally set to start on 5 June, judged to be the most likely date to combine calm seas, a full moon and low water at first light. However, storms meant it was delayed by 24 hours.






