VE Day letters go on display after BBC appeal

Amy Ford
BBC Radio Stoke
BBC A woman with grey, white hair looks slightly off camera while sat in a light blue and white patterned chair. She has a red and black patterned jacket on over a dark top. To her left is a wooden chest of drawers with several family photos on top and a window behind that.BBC
Susannah Midwinter said it was emotional to read the letters sent by her father, Sgt Tony Wade

Letters and documents from VE Day are going on show in an exhibition set up through a partnership between the BBC and the National Memorial Arboretum.

Letters from the Frontline - Words, War and Victory is open to the public at the arboretum in Alrewas, Staffordshire, from Saturday until 16 November.

An appeal by BBC Local Radio in the Midlands for letters sent from the frontlines and the home front from around the Midlands was answered by dozens of people.

Twelve letters were ultimately selected and will be displayed alongside a film showing some of them being read by family members.

They include messages donated from Derbyshire, Herefordshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire, Shropshire, Sutton Coldfield and Warwickshire.

Included in the display is a copy of a telegram announcing the end of the war, sent days before the German forces surrendered.

It was loaned to the exhibition by Bernard Morgan from Crewe, Cheshire, who was based in Germany in May 1945 working in an intelligence unit.

A man with short white hair wears a blue hat with a blue jacket. The jacket is covered with ribbons and badges and war medals. He wears it over a light blue shirt and a red and blue and white striped tie. Behind him is a mirror in a wooden frame.
Bernard Morgan lent the exhibition a telegram announcing the end of the war

The display has gone on public show ahead of Thursday's celebrations to mark 80 years since 8 May 1945, when World War Two ended in Europe.

In another letter, Sgt Tony Wade describes his unit's advance through Germany and how he saw troops surrendering in their thousands.

His letter was donated by his daughter, Susannah Midwinter, who said reading the letters "makes me very emotional and it really brings the personalities completely back in focus and alive".

The exhibition is being held in the drum area of the National Memorial Arboretum.

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