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VE Day 75 | Winston Churchill's VE Day speeches for The Nations Toast

Join us in the Nation's Toast. Sir Winston Churchill reads extracts from Churchill's VE Day speeches that he addressed the nation with on 8 and 9 May 1945. At 3pm on 8 May 1945, Prime Minister Winston Churchill made an announcement on the radio that war in Europe had come to an end. In this video, Winston Churchill (played by Alan Kempston) reads extracts from the speeches that Churchill made in 1945 to accompany a very special Nation's Toast from Bletchley Park. #BletchleyParkVEDay75 #VEDay75 Extracts from Winston Churchill's VE Day Speeches 8 May 1945 God bless you all. This is your Victory! It is the victory of the cause of freedom in every land. In all our long history we have never seen a greater day than this. Everyone, man or woman, has done their best. Everyone has tried. Neither the long years, nor the dangers, nor the fierce attacks of the enemy, have in any way weakened the independent resolve of the British nation. God bless you all. 9 May 1945 My dear friends, I hope you have had two happy days. Happy days are what we have worked for, but happy days are not easily worked for, By discipline, by moral, by industry, by good laws, by fair institutions – by those ways we have won through to happy days for millions and millions of people. You have been attacked by a monstrous enemy – but you never flinched or wavered. Your soldiers were everywhere in the field, your airmen in the skies – and never let us forget our grand Navy. They dared and they did all those feats of adventure and audacity which have ever enabled brave men to wrest victory from obstinate and bestial circumstances. And you people at home have taken all you had to take – which was enough when all is said and done. You never let the men at the front down. No one ever asked for peace because London was suffering. London, like a great rhinoceros, a great hippopotamus, saying: ‘Let them do their worst. London can take it.’ London could take anything. My heart goes out to the Cockneys. Any visitors we may happen to have here today – and many great nations are represented here, by all those who have borne arms with us in the struggle – they echo what I say when I say ‘Good Old London!’ In every capital of the victorious world there are rejoicings tonight, but in none is there any lack of respect for the part which London has played. I return my hearty thanks to you for never having failed in the long, monotonous days and in the long nights as black as hell. God bless you all. May you long remain as citizens of a great and splendid city. May you long remain as the heart of the British Empire. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel to uncover even more secrets from Bletchley Park. Discover More Visit Bletchley Park: http://bit.ly/2vBFKyK Become a Friend: http://bit.ly/2PNhRen Bletchley Park Roll of Honour: http://bit.ly/2x96pmG Bletchley Park Podcast Spotify: http://ow.ly/NufS50zdlzh Apple: http://ow.ly/yfTH50zdlC1 AudioBoom: http://ow.ly/63s150zdlBx Facebook:   / bletchleypark1   Twitter:   / bletchleypark   Instagram:   / bletchleyparkuk   About Bletchley Park Bletchley Park is a vibrant heritage attraction and museum, open daily to visitors. It was the home of British World War Two codebreaking; a place where technological innovation and human endeavour came together to make groundbreaking achievements that have helped shape the world we live in today. This unique site was previously a vast Victorian estate, where parts including the Mansion still survive, expanding during wartime to accommodate Codebreakers Huts and Blocks. During World War Two, the Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS), now known as the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), was based at Bletchley Park. It grew from a small team of specialists to a vast intelligence factory of thousands of dedicated women and men. This extraordinary combination of brilliant and determined people and cutting-edge technology contributed significantly to Allied victory. In tough conditions, they provided vital intelligence and developed pioneering technological innovation that had a direct and profound influence on the outcome of the war. The site continues to reveal secrets and tell fascinating stories of our national legacy.

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