Guernsey Press

Royal Navy ceremonial sail past to mark 75 years of Liberation

ROYAL NAVY patrol ship HMS Tyne will perform a ceremonial sail past of Guernsey on Saturday to celebrate 75 years since the island’s Liberation.

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The Royal Navy is marking Liberation 75 with a ceremonial sail past of HMS Tyne, flying her Battle Ensign, at 10am on Saturday. (Picture supplied by Royal Navy)

The Portsmouth-based warship is spending this week training navigators in the challenging waters around the Channel Islands.

Tyne will spend Friday anchored off Sark with the ship bedecked in flags from bow to stern.

She will blast her siren in celebration at 3pm – when Churchill addressed the nation in 1945 – and shine her searchlight in concert with other Royal Navy warships at home and abroad for five minutes from 9.30pm, signifying the end of the blackout 75 years ago.

On Saturday, she is due to sail past the pier heads at St Peter Port at 10am, flying her Battle Ensign – an oversized White Ensign to make the ship stand out.

The Royal Navy, led by HMS Bulldog, which had played a key role in the Battle of the Atlantic by seizing an Enigma coding machine back in 1941, arrived in the Channel Islands to take the surrender of German forces.

On 9 May 1945, sailors from Bulldog went ashore in St Peter Port, while HMS Beagle landed a party in St Helier to raise the Union flag in Jersey.

Commemorations marking the end of the Second World War have been disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic, replaced largely by a series of virtual events.

As a result, Tyne’s commanding officer, Lt-Commander Richard Skelton, said it was important the Royal Navy participated in commemorative events three-quarters of a century later.

‘We are delighted to be able to play a small part in Guernsey’s 75th anniversary commemorations of Liberation – we know how important this day is to islanders,’ he said.

‘The Channel Islands were the only part of the British Isles occupied by the Nazis – Liberation Day to its inhabitants for them means freedom and an end to five years of tyranny.’

You can find out more about events in Guernsey and watch the sail past via www.liberationday.gg.