Veteran visiting Normandy on D-Day anniversary to ‘pay respects to shipmates’
Alec Penstone, 99, was a submarine detector on HMS Campania on D-Day.
A Royal Navy veteran plans to visit Normandy on the 80th anniversary of D-Day to pay his respects to his shipmates.
Alec Penstone was a submarine detector on HMS Campania and was stopping U-boats on D-Day.
His job was to stop any U-boats attacking the invasion force going across to France.
“I think we succeeded in doing that,” Mr Penstone added.
He added: “We knew they were in northern waters, but they hadn’t surrendered, and we had to find them.
“We searched all in and out all the outlying islands of Norway, and we finally discovered they’d scuttled their boats in a remote part of Norway, made their way back through Norway if they ever got that far back to Germany rather than become prisoners of war.”
Asked if he was proud of the work he did during and after D-Day, he said: “Certainly, no doubt about it.
“I’m very pleased I’m still alive to tell it.”
“My heroes are all those that went to Normandy and their gravestones are there now,” he said.
The veteran plans to go to pay his respects “to all my shipmates who lay with those white gravestones above them”.
The great-grandfather, who is based in the Isle of Wight, said: “He was a real hero and there was no question about it at all.
“And last time when I was over in Normandy the wonderful people I was with actually found his grave 31 miles away and I really thank them for that.”