The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Icelanders attacked the Americans. We had to go ashore to quell the riot

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Myles Shandley was a button boy – a sailor who manned the button-shaped platforms at the top of the mast – and, just after VE Day, he and his crewmates were told by their captain to put on their dress uniforms, known as their “number ones”.

They were preparing to go ashore in Iceland to celebrate the end of the war in Europe, which had happened a few days earlier.

But instead of enjoying the festivitie­s and their impending return home, Mr Shandley and his colleagues were called on to stand with local police to suppress a riot.

Mr Shandley, who spent three years at sea during the war, will be part of commemorat­ions for the 75th anniversar­y of the surrender of Nazi Germany.

He said: “We got all dressed up, ready to go ashore but when we got to the gangplank, there was a riot going on ashore.

“The Americans had marched through with the stars and stripes and playing all their tunes and the Icelanders attacked them. We had to go and quell the riot.”

Upon his arrival home, the father-of-four said he could see “big crowds on the shore” as the ship sailed up the Clyde – which he expected to be wellwisher­s celebratin­g their return.

But the crowds turned out to be American servicemen returning home on the Queen Mary.

His time in the armed forces was extended when he made the jump to the British Army after the war, going on to serve for another eight years.

Speaking on his experience at sea, Mr Shandley said: “I hated every minute of it.”

He said seven of his fellow sailors had to be taken ashore after being overcome by paranoia that U-Boats were in the water, ready to strike.

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