Thousands of people are set to line the streets in London today to mark the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day,or VE Day.
The celebrations begin today with a Churchill speech performance,a military procession of 1,300 armed forces members and a Red Arrows flypast.
Street parties,barbecues and community gatherings will be held across the country.
The parade will kick off Parliament Square,with a recital of Winston Churchill’s famous VE Day speech,at the moment Big Ben strikes noon.
Alan Kennett,a 100-year-old veteran who served in Normandy,will then be handed the Torch for Peace before the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment and The King’s Troop,Royal Horse Artillery lead a procession down Whitehall.
The celebrations will cap off a week of commemorative events 80 years after World War II ended on May 8,1945.
The procession will go past some of London’s biggest landmarks
VE Day celebrations will begin in Parliament Square,where Harry Potter icon Timothy Spall will read out words from Winston Churchill’s famous victory speech.
The 68-year-old actor,whose roles include Auf Wiedersehen,Pet and Chicken Run,will read extracts from the speech in which Churchill told Britons ‘This is not victory of a party or of any class. It’s a victory of the great British nation as a whole.’
A poignant moment will follow,when the Commonwealth War Graves Torch for Peace will be passed from a young person to a 100-year-old Second World War veteran.
Union Jacks will be draped over the Cenotaph and a military procession will take place from Whitehall to Buckingham Palace,via the Mall.
This procession will be watched by the King and Queen,along with other members of the royal family and the prime minister.
Modern fighter jets will take part in the fly past that follows alongside historic Second World War-era aircraft.
The event will culminate in the Royal Air Force’s Red Arrows roaring overhead,leaving behind them red,white,and blue smoke.
Many Britons held victory parties,placing tables together to form the letter ‘V’ (Picture: Corbis Historical/Getty Images)
The entire nation gets into the spirit (Picture: AFP)
Street parties will be held across the country on the bank holiday.
The King and Queen themselves will welcome veterans and members of the wartime generation at Buckingham Palace for a tea party.
There will also be an afternoon street party and an evening do at HMS Belfast,the most significant surviving Second World War warship.
Festivities across the country include an open-air music festival in Witton Park,Blackburn,as well as a VE Day picnic in the Shropshire town of Caven Arms.
The Wrentham Brass Band will also be performing Second World War music in Norfolk.
Winston Churchill’s family home,Chartwell in Kent is planning lots of fun activities and music to celebrate his role in the momentous day.
Street and garden parties will likely be thrown both on the bank holiday and on VE Day itself (Picture: AFP)
VE Day,May 8,is not a bank holiday.
Instead,the early May bank holiday,May 5,has been dedicated to community celebrations marking the anniversary.
Those wanting to celebrate the on the day itself should not despite,however.
That is because pubs will be allowed to stay open for an extra two hours,allowing revellers to celebrate until 1am on the Friday morning.
The Royal Air Force’s aerobatic team will take to the skies 22 other aircraft for a flypast over Buckingham Palace at 1.45pm today.
A Lancaster Bomber from the Battle of Britain memorial flight,a Typhoon,an A400M Atlas,a C-17 Globemaster,Rivet Joint and Poseidon aircraft are all joining the display.
This maps shows the route the Red Arrows will take,showing where you need to be to see the iconic jets.
The route of the Red Arrows flypast across the South East of England
The flypast will fly over The Mall and Buckingham Palace at around 1.45pm on Bank Holiday Monday.
The aerobatic team are also flying over parts of Norfolk,Suffolk,Essex,Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire.
After leaving London,the squadron will then fly over Hampshire before landing at Bournemouth airport.
The plans will fly over Beech,near Alton,at around 2pm before passing north of Winchester to Longstock near Stockbridge,20 miles north of Southampton.
As they then head to Bournemouth Airport for 2.06pm,they will be visible from around Romsey,Ringwood and the northern parts of the New Forest.
The Red Arrows will be flying from 10:45am this morning (Picture: AS1 Iwan Lewis / RAF / SWNS)
The route has been split into zones with expected timings,making it easy to plan a trip to see the aircraft.
Area A: North Sea,Suffolk and Norfolk,between 10.45am – 1.45pm
Area B: East Suffolk (Saxmundham) and Suffolk (East Bergholt),between 12.15pm – 1.10pm
Area C: Suffolk (East Bergholt) and Essex (Colchester),between 12.20pm – 1.10pm
Area D: Essex (Colchester and Witham),between 12.20pm – 1.10pm
Area E: Essex (Witham) and London City,between 12.25pm – 1.10pm
Area F: London City and London Heathrow,between 12.25pm – 1.10pm
Area G: Buckinghamshire (Denham) and Buckinghamshire (Halton),between 12.45pm – 1.25pm
Area H: Buckinghamshire (Halton) and Oxfordshire (Brize),between 12.45pm – 1.25pm
Area I: North west London,between 12.45pm – 1.25pm
United News - unews.co.za