For this victory, we join in offering our thanks to the Providence which has guided and sustained us through the dark days of adversity. Our rejoicing is sobered and subdued by a supreme consciousness of the terrible price we have paid to rid the world of Hitler and his evil band. Let us not forget, my fellow Americans, the sorrow and the heartache which today abide in the homes of so many of our neighbors - neighbors whose most priceless possession has been rendered as a sacrifice to redeem our liberty. We must work to finish the war. Our victory is but half-won. The West is free, but the East is still in bondage to the treacherous tyranny of the Japanese. When the last Japanese division has surrendered unconditionally, then only will our fighting job be done.
VE Day, officially, is the day that the Allies, including the Soviet Union, formally accepted the unconditional surrender of the armed forces of Nazi Germany. Germany's surrender was tendered to the Allies by Admiral Karl Dönitz, designated as the German President after Adolf Hitler's suicide in the bunker on April 30. A career naval officer and a veteran of World War I, Karl Dönitz worked throughout the war with Germany's U-boat fleet, which caused massive damage to Allied shipping in the Atlantic. After the war, he was found guilty of war crimes and was sentenced to ten years in prison. The formal surrender took place in Reims, France, on May 7 in a schoolhouse which served as Gen. Eisenhower's headquarters. The next day, at the request of the Soviets, it was signed again in Berlin.With news of the surrender of Nazi Germany, wild celebrations swept the world. In London, massive crowds crowded into Trafalgar Square and and at Buckingham Palace, where King George VI, Queen Elizabeth, and Churchill appeared together on the balcony. In the New Yorker, Mollie Panter-Downs described the VE celebrations in London:
...American sailors and laughing girls formed a conga line down the middle of Piccadilly and cockneys linked arms in the Lambeth Walk. It was a day and night of no fixed plan and no organized merriment. Each group danced its own dance, sang its own song, and went its own way as the spirit moved it. The most tolerant, self-effacing people in London on V-E Day were the police, who simply stood by, smiling benignly, while soldiers swung by one arm from lamp standards and laughing groups tore down hoardings to build the evening's bonfires...The young service men and women who swung arm in arm down the middle of every street, singing and swarming over the few cars rash enough to come out, were simply happy with an immense holiday happiness. They were the liberated people who, like their counterparts in every celebrating capital that night, were young enough to outlive the past and to look forward to an unspoilt future. Their gaiety was very moving.
In the U.S., President Truman, who also celebrated his 61st birthday that day, dedicated the victory to President Roosevelt, who had died less than a month before (on April 12). Huge crowds thronged the streets of New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago and hundreds of other towns and cities across the nation, including Norfolk, Virginia (left). The festive spirit was a bit less in the United States than in Europe, however, because of the ongoing war in the Pacific.
Although much of the world's population celebrated the fall of the Third Reich, VE Day was tempered by the horrors of the concentration camps found by the Allies throughout Germany and elsewhere, and by the widespread devastation wrought by the war. Most significantly, Frank Hauck and the rest of the Allies knew the job wasn't finished. Victory over Japan was still to be earned.
Photo sources:
(1) Truman: http://www.google.com/imgres
(2) Norfolk: http://thedonovan.com
(3) Hauck: http://trees.ancestry.com


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