Queen’s death is reminder of disappearing WWII generation

Sep 15, 2022, 5:07 PM | Updated: Sep 16, 2022, 11:37 am

An information board with a photo of Henriette Hanotte stands next to the local church in the cente...

An information board with a photo of Henriette Hanotte stands next to the local church in the center of the town of Bachy, France, Friday, Sept. 16, 2022. Hanotte was a Belgian resistance member during World War II and from the age of nineteen aided the escape of nearly 140 airmen from occupied Belgium into France as part of the Comet Line. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

(AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)


              FILE - Chelsea Pensioners raise their hats as they offer three cheers for Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, as they take part in their Founders Day parade in London, Thursday, June 7, 2012. The Royal Hospital Chelsea has been caring for Britain's veteran soldiers since its foundation by King Charles II in 1682, the veterans known as Chelsea Pensioners are easily identifiable by their traditional red coats. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
            
              FILE - Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by Commandant Lynda Rose, right, inspects vintage vehicles used by the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry, in which she herself served during WWII. The vehicles assembled in the quadrangle of Buckingham Palace, London on June 28, 2007, to mark the centenary of the corps. (AP Photo/Fiona Hanson/Pool/PA Wire, File)
            
              FILE - Princess Elizabeth, wearing ATS uniform, lays her wreath at the foot of the Cenotaph in London beside the King's wreath during the Remembrance Day observances on Nov. 10, 1946. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - World War II British D-Day veteran Bernard Morgan, aged 95, who was a sergeant decoder in the Royal Air Force 83 Group Control Centre and landed at Gold beach on the afternoon of June 6, 1944, speaks to the 'D-Day Darlings' singing group after they posed for a group photograph on the 'D-Day 75 Garden', for the 75th anniversary of D-Day at the RHS (Royal Horticultural Society) Chelsea Flower Show, in London, Monday, May 20, 2019. World-renowned and quintessentially British, the annual show is a celebration of horticultural excellence and innovation. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, File)
            
              FILE - A smiling Queen Elizabeth II passes in front of British veterans during a ceremony in Arromanches, France, June 7, 1984 for the 40th anniversary of the D-Day landing. Arromanches was the first Normandy port to be liberated by the Allied forces. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - Britain's Princess Elizabeth, a Junior Commander in the Auxiliary Territorial Service, receives a clock presented to her by her old associates at the camp where she received her early training, during a ceremony at the No. 1 M.T. Training Center, in Camberley, England, Aug. 3, 1945. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - A young admirer tries her hardest to break away past a soldiers rifle, and reach the Royal Coach, as the King and Queen drove towards the House of Lords for the opening of Parliament in London on Aug. 15, 1945. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - Symbolic of the united spirit with which the Allies are forging the liberation of France from the Nazis, American and British flags march with the Tricolor of France in Cherbourg on the annual observance of Bastille Day, July 14, 1944. These British Tommies drew vociferous applause from the citizens of the Normandy port as they paraded the streets of the city. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - British troops wounded is assault on Normandy arrive back in Britain. Wounded British troops leaving the landing ship on which they were brought back from France, June 14, 1944. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - British Chelsea Pensioners who are veterans of the World War II Battle of Normandy, codenamed Operation Overlord, and D-Day pose for a group photograph during a D-Day 75th anniversary photocall at the Royal Hospital Chelsea in London, Monday, May 13, 2019. The 75th anniversary of D-Day is on 6 June, pictured are from left: Roy Cadman, James George, Bill Fitzgerald, Ernie Boyden, Frank Mouque, George Skipper, Arthur Ellis. D-Day saw some 156,000 U.S., British and Canadian forces landing on five beaches along a 50 mile (80 kilometer) stretch of France's coast, supported by thousands of ships, landing vessels, planes and gliders, and with inland help from French resistance fighters. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, File)
            
              FILE - Men from British Minesweepers operating off the Normandy beachhead enjoy their first shore leave, June 15, 1944. Left to right are: Telegraphis E.F. Guyatt, of Putney, Signalman E.Y. Hammonds of Woodford Essex, and Wireman V.J. Howe of Romford Essex, on the grass with their picnic age. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - British troops cheerfully wait in a carriage for the first stage of their trip to the western front by train, in England, Sept. 20, 1939. (AP Photo/Len Puttnam, File)
            
              FILE - Air raid damage scene near London Bridge, in the City of London on Sept. 9, 1940. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - Princess Elizabeth makes her way to saluting base where she will watch the march past of some of the eight thousand Girl Guides on parade in Hyde Park, London, on May 19, 1946. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - Britain's Princess Elizabeth sits at the driving wheel of an ambulance in April 1945 after completing a course of driving instruction at the A.T.S. Center to be an officer. During WWII, young Princess Elizabeth briefly became known as No. 230873, Second Subaltern Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor of the Auxiliary Transport Service No. 1. After months of campaigning for her parents' permission to do something for the war effort, the heir to the throne enthusiastically learned how to drive and service ambulances and lorries. She rose to the rank of honorary Junior Commander within months. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - Princess Elizabeth of England talks to Private Rupert John Worth during a visit to Bedford, England on Feb. 14, 1946. (AP Photo, File)
            
              FILE - A section of the gigantic crowd which assembled in Parliament Square to celebrate VJ Day, in London, Aug. 15, 1945. (AP Photo, File)

LONDON (AP) — The long goodbye for Queen Elizabeth II is a reminder of a broader truth playing out with little fanfare across Britain: The nation is bidding farewell to the men and women who fought the country’s battles during World War II.

The queen, who served as a mechanic and truck driver in the last months of the war, was a tangible link to the sailors, soldiers, airmen, marines and others who signed up to do their bit in a war that killed 384,000 service personnel and 70,000 British civilians.

But like the queen, even the youngest veterans of the war are now nearing their 100th birthdays, and a steady stream of obituaries tells the story of a disappearing generation.

“It’s extraordinary how that sense of the passing of time is felt very keenly at the moment,´´ said Charles Byrne, director general of the Royal British Legion, the nation’s largest armed services charity.

“The queen was a personification of that generation … and with her passing, it just drives home the sense that time is moving relentlessly, as it does.”

That loss is, perhaps, felt more widely in the United Kingdom than a country like the United States, because the U.K.’s very existence was threatened during the war. Bombs fell on cities from London to Belfast, women were conscripted into war work and wartime rationing didn’t end until 1954.

Elizabeth, who famously saved ration coupons to make her wedding dress in 1947, led a ceremony of remembrance for all the nation’s fallen service personnel each year on the anniversary of the end of World War I.

“She is the epitome of that sense of service and stoic contribution,´´ Byrne said. “And that is treasured more than ever.”

British authorities don’t know exactly how many World War II veterans are left because the nation’s census takers didn’t track military service until last year. Those figures are due to be released next month.

The Royal Air Force says it knows of only one surviving Battle of Britain pilot, the men Winston Churchill immortalized as “the few” who helped turn the tide of the war. Group Captain John Hemingway celebrated his 103rd birthday in July.

But the number of survivors is dwindling.

Among those who died this year were Henriette Hanotte, who ferried downed Allied pilots across the French border as they made their way home. And Harry Billinge, who was just 18 when he joined the first wave of troops to land on Gold Beach in Normandy on D-Day, as well as Douglas Newham, who survived 60 bombing raids as a Royal Air Force navigator, but was haunted by those who didn’t return.

It was a time of shared sacrifice. Then-Princess Elizabeth, like many teenagers, had to persuade her father to let her join the army in 1945.

When Elizabeth turned 18, King George VI exempted her from mandatory military service because he said her training as the heir to the throne took precedence over the wartime need for manpower.

But the princess, who began her war work at 14 with a broadcast to displaced children and later tended a vegetable garden as part of the government’s “Dig for Victory” program, got her way.

She enlisted in the Auxiliary Territorial Service in February 1945 and trained to become a military truck driver and mechanic. The ATS was the largest of the auxiliary services deploying women to non-combat rolls such as clerks, drivers and dispatch riders to free up men for front line duties.

The first female member of the royal family to serve in the armed forces, Elizabeth was promoted to honorary junior commander, the equivalent of an army captain, after completing five months of training. But the war ended before she could be assigned to active duty.

On May 8, 1945, Princess Elizabeth appeared in uniform on the balcony of Buckingham Palace as the royal family greeted the crowds celebrating Germany’s surrender. That night, she and her sister, Princess Margaret, slipped out of the palace to take part in the festivities.

“We cheered the king and queen on the balcony and then walked miles through the streets,” she later recalled. “I remember lines of unknown people linking arms and walking down Whitehall, all of us just swept along on a tide of happiness and relief.”

Many of those who took part in that joy are now gone.

Among them is Frank Baugh, a Royal Marine who helped guide a landing craft to Sword Beach during the June 6, 1944, D-Day landings. He later campaigned for a memorial to be built to commemorate the 22,442 men and women who died under British command during the Battle of Normandy.

A few months before his death in June at 98, Baugh toured the British Normandy Memorial, which overlooks the beach where he fought.

“I would like to see children coming all of the time,´´ he said. “Because they’re the people we need to tell what’s happened, and those lads that didn’t get back — to remember them.”

___

Follow all AP stories on Queen Elizabeth II’s death at https://apnews.com/hub/queen-elizabeth-ii.

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Queen’s death is reminder of disappearing WWII generation