Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Britain’s mail service apologizes for D-Day memorial stamp error
LONDON — Britain’s Royal Mail service is used to apologizing to customers, mostly for missing parcels and letters sent to the wrong address.
But an error in a design for a stamp to commemorate the 75th anniversary of D-Day — it showed U.S. troops on the wrong beach, in Asia instead of Europe — has prompted an apology to veterans and their families.
The Royal Mail on Thursday announced the special series of stamps. One design trumpeted on Twitter showed troops knee-deep in water as they disembarked from a landing craft. The caption said, “D-Day: Allied soldiers and medics wade ashore.”
But the beach shown in the design is not in Normandy, France. It’s in Dutch New Guinea, today a part of Indonesia. And the stamp used an image of the wrong craft.
Eagle-eyed observers and World War II aficionados quickly spotted the errors.
An account for Jersey War Tours, which offers private tours on the island of Jersey, off the coast of Britain, noted, “LCI-30 did not participate in the Normandy landings,” referring to the amphibious assault craft pictured in the stamp design.
The image used by the Royal Mail showed U.S. troops carrying stretchers ashore in Dutch New Guinea in May 1944, weeks before the Normandy landings. The photo was taken by the U.S. Coast Guard, according to the website of the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, which holds a copy of the image.
Some Twitter users found the flub funny and posted other images that the Royal Mail could have used, including Viking ships and people relaxing on a beach. But others said the error was disrespectful to veterans.
“Wrong theatre; wrong date; wrong vessel; wrong troops. This gross insult to veterans and those who didn’t make it should be withdrawn,” Andy Saunders, a history consultant, said on Twitter.