Lionesses among those to be honoured at Pride of Britain Awards
Other honours will be given to a girl who saved her father’s life, and two sailors who took 27 men off a burning ship.
The Lionesses will be honoured with a special gong at this year’s Pride of Britain Awards alongside community heroes.
The judging panel selected England’s European champions for the special award for “galvanising” the nation and providing a whole generation with “new role models”.
Carol Vorderman and Ashley Banjo will co-host the award ceremony on October 27 which will be attended by a plethora of famous faces to celebrate the inspiration winners.
The trio from Manchester, Norfolk, and Cumbria will be given a special recognition award for trekking 550 miles over 31 days.
Mr Airey said: “During our walk we met very many suicide-bereaved parents, all of them said the same thing; it was only after they lost their child that they discovered that suicide was the biggest killer of under 35’s in the UK; they all asked, ‘If suicide is the biggest threat to our children’s lives, why is no one talking about it?’”
Ms King, 82, from Southend-On-Sea, campaigned during her life for access for guide dogs in public spaces and became the first female president of the National Federation of the Blind UK.
School girl Elizabeth Soffe, eight, wins the Child of Courage Award for her charity run which raised £202,000 for the hospital that saved her life.
Birmingham Children’s Hospital treated her after a faulty air conditioner blaze set fire to her room and cot.
Soffe, who still has scars, tells people: “It doesn’t matter what you look like, it just matters that you’re kind.”
While a 15-year-old girl who saved two lives after they were swept away by treacherous river currents will be given the teenager of courage award.
Lucy Montgomery from Armagh saved family friend Mathieu, eight, and her father Graham, who cannot swim, when the pair were dragged out during paddle-boarding in the Charente River in France.
The HMS Argyll sailors saved 27 men who were on board 28,000-tonne cargo ship the Grande American when it caught on fire 150 miles off the French coast.
A mother-of-four from east London will also be given the TSB community hero for supporting and feeding the community.
Michelle Dornelly, who formed the Hackney Community Food Hub, fed more than 100,000 people while living on Universal Credit payments.
Police officers James Willetts, 25, and Leon Mitoo, 34, from the west Midlands, will be given the This Morning Emergency Services Award after being stabbed in Bromwich town centre.
Brothers Parminder Hunjan, 37, and Maninder Hunjan, 26, were jailed for a total of 26 years for the act in May 2022.
Mr Mittoo said: “I thought I was going to die. I just did everything I could. It was a fight for survival.”
While Alex Anderson, 22, from Newport becomes the Prince’s Trust young achiever of the year.
After Mr Anderson was rejected from the RAF in 2017 due to his Asperger diagnosis, he spent 1000 hours of his time supporting veterans, the elderly and young people across Gwent. He is now a logistic supplier at RAF Odiham in Hampshire.
More than 150 famous faces including Idris Elba, Dame Mary Berry, Molly-Mae Hague, Tommy Fury, Olly Murs and Holly Willoughby are set to join this year’s winners to celebrate their heroism and bravery at the event.
Among the star-studded judging panel is actor Michael Sheen, Olympic gold medallist Nicola Adams, Radio DJ Adele Roberts, President of the Royal College of General Practitioners Clare Gerada and Chief Constable Serena Kennedy of Merseyside Police as well as broadcasters Moira Stuart and Kate Garraway.
The Pride of Britain Awards will be broadcast on ITV on October 27 at 8pm.