Chattanooga Times Free Press

World War II veterans honored a day before D-Day anniversar­y

- BY SYLVIE CORBET AND JEFF SCHAEFFER

RANVILLE, France — More than 20 British World War II veterans gathered Sunday near Pegasus Bridge in northweste­rn France, one of the first sites liberated by Allied forces from Nazi Germany, for commemorat­ions honoring the nearly 160,000 troops from Britain, the U.S., Canada and other nations who landed in Normandy on June 6, 1944.

Veterans, their families and French and internatio­nal visitors braved the rainy weather to take part in series of events this weekend and on Monday for the 78th anniversar­y of D-Day.

This year’s D-Day anniversar­y comes after two successive years of the COVID-19 pandemic restricted or deterred visitors. Many felt the celebratio­ns paying tribute to those who brought peace and freedom on the continent held special meaning this year as war is raging again in Europe since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.

Dozens of U.S. veterans were also attending events in the region, ahead of Monday’s ceremony at the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, home to the gravesites of 9,386 who died fighting on D-Day and in the operations that followed.

Welcomed to the sound of bagpipes at the Pegasus Memorial in the French town of Ranville, British veterans attended a ceremony commemorat­ing a key operation in the first minutes of the Allied invasion of Normandy, when troops had to take control a strategica­lly crucial bridge.

Bill Gladden, 98, took part to the D-Day British airborne operation and was later shot while defending the bridge.

“I landed on D-Day and was injured on the 18th of June … So I was three years at the hospital,” he said.

Meanwhile, on the British side of the Channel, then 17-year-old Mary Scott was working at the communicat­ions center in Portsmouth, listening to the coded messages coming from the front line and passing them on as part of the operations on Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno and Sword Beaches.

“The war was in my ears,” she recalled, describing the radio machine she operated via levers.

“When they (communicat­ion officers) had to respond to my messages and they lifted their lever, you heard all the sounds of the men on the beaches: bombs, machine guns, men shouting, screaming.”

Scott, who will soon turn 96, said she got very “emotional” when arriving to Normandy on Saturday on a trip organized by the Taxi Charity for Military Veterans. She was in tears when seeing the D-Day beaches.

“Suddenly I thought maybe some of those young men I spoke to… that they had died,” she said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO/JEREMIAS GONZALEZ ?? British WWII veterans Roy Maxwell and Mary Scott arrive in a British Taxi Charity for Military Veterans to the ceremony Sunday at Pegasus Bridge, in Ranville, Normandy.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO/JEREMIAS GONZALEZ British WWII veterans Roy Maxwell and Mary Scott arrive in a British Taxi Charity for Military Veterans to the ceremony Sunday at Pegasus Bridge, in Ranville, Normandy.

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