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A 95-year-old World War Two veteran said it was ‘wonderful in every way’ to be able to parachute into Normandy 75 years after he did so for D-Day.

Harry Read, 95, and John Hutton, 94, embarked on a tandem jump this afternoon over Sannerville following a display around 280 parachutists commemorating the Allied invasion.

The ex-servicemen’s jump with the Red Devils parachute team was in danger of being cancelled due to delays and technical difficulties but they pulled it off in the end.

The pair took off from Duxford in Cambridgeshire and leapt over France from between 800 and 1,000 feet and landed in fields overlooked by poppies.


Veteran Jock Hutton, 94, completes his tandem parachute jump with the Red Devils (Picture: PA)

Harry Read, 95, and Jock Hutton, 94, relax after completing the jump with the Red Devils (Picture: PA)

John ‘Jock’ Hutton joked about having a sore backside after the less than smooth landing (Picture: PA)

The area was the original drop zone for the 8th (Midlands) Parachute Battalion, who went on to destroy bridges in a bid to restrict German movements during the missions.



They were the first two out of a Cessna aircraft and were followed by a 5,000 sq ft Union Flag.

A problem with civilian aircraft ‘availability’ meant the crew had to wait for another aircraft to be found and were in a race against time to get into French airspace early enough to get clearance to land.

Mr Read, from Bournemouth, Dorset, took part in the D-Day landings as a 20-year-old wireless operator with the Royal Signals and had a battery the size of a toolbox strapped to his right leg when he was pushed out a plane on June 6, 1944.

After today’s jump, the retired Salvation Army officer said: ‘I feel good. My health is good and my mind is still ticking away very nicely.

‘I thought the jump was brilliant. I just had thoughts of anticipation after looking forward to it.

‘Everything is worth the wait. The jump was wonderful in every way.

‘I couldn’t believe the drop was going to be postponed in any way because I had his assurance from God.

‘If that had happened I was going to be examining my faith.

‘I don’t think I’ll do another jump again.’

Ex-serviceman Harry Read said the jump was ‘wonderful in every way’ (Picture: PA)

But Mr Mr Read doesn’t think he’ll be doing a jump again (Picture: PA)

Known to his friends as Jock, Mr Hutton, from Stirling, Scotland, was 19 when he served in the 13th Lancashire Parachute Battalion .

He said it was ‘great to be back on French soil’ and that it’s ‘such a relief’ to get the 75th D-Day anniversary out of the way.

But he was concerned the jump wouldn’t go ahead when he looked out of the window and saw how much mist there was.

He said: ‘All this bloody way and we’re not going to get out of the aircraft.’

Mr Hutton said the landing wasn’t as smooth as he hoped and joked about having a sore backside after he ‘landed on a bunch of boulders.’

Reflecting on his jump in 1944, Mr Hutton said he ‘enjoyed the fall’ but said the French thought they were German soldiers on an exercise at the time.

Army Colonel Andrew Jackson, Deputy Commander of the Parachute Regiment’s 16 Air Assault Brigade, parachuted clutching medals earned by a relative who fought in D-Day.

The commemorative parachute jump marked D-Day’s 75th anniversary (Picture: PA)

Parachutists help support Harry Read after the jump from 800 to 1,000 feet (Picture: PA)

He said it was ‘really emotional’ picturing the bravery and efforts of those fighting in Nazi occupied France as the aircraft flew over.



He added: ‘As we flew over the coast I was thinking it was the first time this had been done and it is really special.

‘Seeing how many people were watching was quite humbling.’

D-Day veteran John Eden, 94, from Lancashire, watched the parachute drop after missing out on the chance to jump out of a glider as part of his role in the D-Day landings with the 12th Devonshire Regiment.

The plan was abandoned at the last minute and they were sent over on landing craft instead.

He said: ‘I was little sad not to get the chance. It was great to watch them today and celebrate the success of D-Day and to remember those who died.’

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