80th Anniversary of D-Day commemorations

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Events to commemorate the 80th Anniversary of the D-Day landings are taking place across Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole (BCP) on Thursday 6 June.

Bournemouth

Thursday 6 June 2024:

11am – Wreath laying at the War Memorial

9pm – Tribute from the new Mayor of Bournemouth, Cllr George Farquhar, at the Beacon Lighting

9.15pm – Beacon Lighting at the Jon Egging Memorial

 

Saturday 8 June:

3 – 8pm – Vintage entertainment in the bandstand in the Lower Gardens

5.30 – 6pm – Procession from Westcliff Gardens to the bandstand

6.15 – 6.25pm – Speech from Cllr George Farquhar, Mayor of Bournemouth and Chaplain

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Poole

Thursday 6 June:

10.15 – 11.15am – Royal British Legion event with the new Mayor of Poole, Cllr Pete Miles in attendance. Events including laying a wreath at the Dolphin Quay Plaque

5.30 – 8.30pm – Vintage entertainment & poetry reading from local schoolchildren on a stage opposite the Poole Arms. Vintage military vehicles (TBC)

5 - 7pm - St James' Church provides a place for reflection and shows a video detailing Poole's involvement with D-Day

8.30 – 9.15pm  A flotilla of local professional vessels led by Poole Harbour Commissioners – please watch this from Poole Quay and not other vessels on the water

9pm – Sea Cadets March from Baiter Park to the Beacon lighting arriving at 9pm

9.15pm Beacon Lighting near the stage opposite the Poole Arms

NB: 10.00am – 11.30pm Road Closure on the Quay

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Christchurch

Thursday 6 June:

6 – 10pm  Event by Christchurch Town Council featuring live music, local food, fun fair rides, face painting and a ‘history hub’ curated by local historians.

6pm – Town Crier’s proclamation from the King

6.30pm – Church bells ‘Ringing out for Peace’

9.15pm – Scouts light the Jubilee Beacon

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Did you know?

In the months leading up to the landings, the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force, Dwight D Eisenhower and Britain's Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, Ground Forces Commander in Chief, met at The Carlton Hotel in Bournemouth to discuss strategic battle plans whilst visiting troops stationed nearby.

Christchurch was also significant in the war efforts, with the United States Army Air Forces Ninth Air Force establishing a base there in 1944.

In Poole, local companies were instrumental in supplying boats and associated materials needed for the D-Day war efforts, and the town was the third largest embarkation point for the Normandy landings with thousands of troops setting sail from the harbour, bound for the beaches of Normandy on 5 June 1944.

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