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Giant silhouettes of D-Day fallen head to Normandy for 80th anniversary

The Standing with Giants charity has created the figures to represent those who died in the key Second World War battle.

Ben Mitchell
Friday 05 April 2024 15:06 BST
The giant silhouettes will be installed at the British Normandy Memorial which overlooks Gold Beach (Andrew Matthews/PA)
The giant silhouettes will be installed at the British Normandy Memorial which overlooks Gold Beach (Andrew Matthews/PA) (PA Archive)

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A convoy of lorries carrying 1,475 giant silhouettes representing the servicemen who died on D-Day is setting off to France where they will be installed to mark the 80th anniversary of the Normandy invasion.

The figures, designed by Dan Barton of the Standing with Giants charity, are being transported from Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire, via Fort Nelson in Portsmouth – where the silhouettes have previously been displayed – before they travel by ferry to France.

They will then be installed at the British Normandy Memorial which overlooks Gold Beach which was one of the key landing points.

As well as the silhouettes representing the personnel from all three services, two bespoke figures have been created to represent nurses Sisters Evershed and Field, who died while saving 75 men from a sinking hospital ship.

Also, figures representing 50 French resistance fighters are to be placed around the French Memorial in Ver-sur-Mer.

Project co-ordinator Janette Barton told the PA news agency: “Since we started the project, the public response has been incredible.

“It resonates with the public, everybody has a story and something to relate to with the soldiers.

“We really want the younger generation to know why they have the freedoms they have today – it’s all about passing on that baton of remembrance.”

Four lorries with flatbed trailers accompanied by more than 200 Harley-Davidson remembrance riders are taking part in the convoy.

The lorries will contain 18 stillages created and designed by Standing with Giants to carry the silhouettes.

These have been decorated with 35,782 knitted poppies made and donated by members of the Women’s Institute.

They also feature recreations of letters written by fallen servicemen of the Normandy campaign.

On arrival, a team of 30 volunteers will spend two weeks installing the silhouettes which will be open to the public throughout the summer and during the D-Day 80th anniversary commemorations.

To support the project, the public can sponsor a plaque in honour of a loved one for £150 which will be placed in front of a giant and remain at the memorial site for at least five years.

For more information visit: www.standingwithgiants.co.uk

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