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Short History Of...

VE Day

Short History Of...

Noiser

History

4.84.1K Ratings

🗓️ 4 May 2025

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Victory in Europe Day brought the curtain down on a horrific conflict that decimated a continent and upended the world. But the price of victory over fascism was impossibly high. Many millions had been killed, and vast areas of Europe had been all but destroyed. VE Day signalled the end of Nazi Germany, and yet the war on the Pacific Front was still raging, and Stalin was already tightening his grip on what would become the Eastern Bloc. Meanwhile, many of the countries that had joined the fight against Hitler were left broken, bankrupt, and lawless. So, what did it take for the war to finally end? How was news of Germany’s surrender spread and received? And amid the devastation, how do the continent’s citizens celebrate and look forward with optimism?  This is a Short History Of VE Day. A Noiser production, written by Martin McNamara. With thanks to Keith Lowe, a British historian and writer specialising in the Second World War.  Get every episode of Short History Of a week early with Noiser+. You’ll also get ad-free listening, bonus material, and early access to shows across the Noiser network. Click the Noiser+ banner to get started. Or, if you’re on Spotify or Android, go to noisier.com/subscriptions. If you want to know more about how the Allies turned the tide on the war in Europe and began the final push towards victory, check out D-Day: The Tide Turns - another podcast from the Noiser network. Search ‘D-Day: The Tide Turns’ in your podcast app and hit follow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Our sponsor today is Ancestry.

0:05.0

2025 marks 80 years since VE Day, when the Allies celebrated victory in Europe after almost

0:11.0

six years of fighting. I don't personally know a great deal about my own family's contribution

0:16.0

to the war, but I'd be really keen to find out, so I shall be looking at ancestry during this

0:20.0

period.

0:25.5

Of course, wars don't just take place on the battlefield, and your ancestors, like mine,

0:30.2

may have contributed to victory in more ways than one. You can discover their untold stories at Ancestry this week, with free access to millions of records from both World Wars.

0:36.3

Celebrate the roles your family played in securing peace

0:39.0

and help find out how you're connected to their fight for victory.

0:43.3

Simply register at ancestry.co.uk to discover your family's wartime stories

0:47.9

with free access to global records from both world wars

0:51.2

from the 5th to the 11th of May.

1:04.0

Thank you. from both World Wars from the 5th to the 11th of May. It's early morning, Tuesday the 8th of May, 1945.

1:06.0

In a modest home in a suburb of South London, a young man is finishing a mug of tea in the kitchen,

1:13.6

where his mother is humming along to a breezy tune on the wireless.

1:17.6

She brings out another batch of scones from the oven.

1:21.6

Every surface is covered with plates of sandwiches, cakes and trifles,

1:26.6

made from the ration coupons she has been saving.

1:30.1

He's getting under her feet, so she shoes him at the door.

1:38.5

There, a neighbor waves him over to help him bring his dining room furniture into position,

1:43.5

extending the long line of tables

1:45.6

and chairs that's already snaking down the middle of the road.

...

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