Man missing from old age home shows up at D-Day celebrations in Normandy.

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An 89-year-old veteran who went missing from his retirement home in Sussex, England yesterday morning has been located: He showed up today on the beachhead of Normandy, medals pinned to his coat, to take in the anniversary celebration of the D-Day invasion.

The Guardian, which is liveblogging the D-Day 70th anniversary festivities, has the story:

Sussex police were called at 7.15pm on Thursday by staff at the Pines care home, Furze Hill, in Hove, who said an 89-year-old who lived there had gone out at 10.30am and had not been seen since. He had gone out wearing a grey mackintosh and a jacket underneath with his war medals on, police said.

Officers began searching the area, including checking hospitals in case something had happened to him, and spoke to bus and taxi companies, but none of them knew where he was.
Late last night, a younger veteran called the nursing home to let administrators know that he'd met up with the old man on a France-bound bus, and they'd split a hotel room not far from the battlefields of Normandy.

The younger veteran reportedly promised to make sure the codger got safely home, just as soon as they were done celebrating their conquest of the Nazis and the fact that an almost-nonagenarian British pensioner is still such a complete badass.

Update: The Guardian has identified the old man as Bernard Jordan, ex-mayor of Hove, England, and a D-Day vet. His nursing home tweeted out his pic:
 
The younger veteran reportedly promised to make sure the codger got safely home, just as soon as they were done celebrating their conquest of the Nazis and the fact that an almost-nonagenarian British pensioner is still such a complete badass.

Haha, awesome.
Most don't have anything that good to celebrate.
 
some of these old guys are still very plucky.

My wife’s grandfather was sharp right up the end, he passed last year born in 1925 served on a Royal Navy Carrier fighting the Japanese. We visited him in Scotland in 2012 and he was a terror on his scooter, but he went fast.
 
They say "better to ask for forgiveness than permission". Guys like this don't ask for either one, they just do what needs doing.

Good for him!
 
Had he asked permission, the home would have probably denied him, locked him in his room and kept him under surveillance to keep him from escaping. He shouldn't have to ask, Tell them at the desk where he's going and if he ain't home by dark, he got lucky !
 
Heh, read this and the first thing that came to mind was:

"There's no stoppin' Stormin' Jordan from making the beach..."

There's a reason why we still refer to these guys as "The Greatest Generation."
 
One article I read said he did ask but they denied his request. So he went anyways. Bravo to him. IMO they should have drove him there and provided what he needed.

Brass balls is right. Hope my boss doesn't read this. But I spent a good part of my day watching the TV. Gave me chills listening to the Heros talk about what it felt like that day.
 
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