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

What better way to go out?

Shut into a stuffy nursing home, waiting to die... Or out on the beaches once more, paying your respects to the lads that didn't come home...

I'm pretty sure there's not an old trooper alive that would prefer option A.
 
Reminds me of the joke:

An elderly gentlemen arrives n France and waits in a long line at border control.

He finally gets up to the front and the agent asks to see his passport.

The gentlemen fumbles around looking for it.

Annoyed, the agent says "You have been in this line for a good hour and you didnt have your passport ready, what is you problem?"

The elderly gent responds " I didnt think I needed a passport. The last time I came I didnt need one"

To which the agent replied "You always need a passport to enter our glorious country of France. When was the last time you came to France?"

The gentlemen responded, "1944, and chicken shiites like you were no where to be found."
 
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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:
I would think that would be against privacy laws
 
Watching a discussion on the news with the battle dress and pattern webbing used during the period the commentator said "wow,.. that looks like it would barely fit over a 12 year old child today".

He was reminded most of these men were much smaller than today's weight/height standards having grown up during the Great Depression and in fact very lean and capable fellows with the right fuel despite their smaller stature.

One vet I worked with in the early 80's was barely 5' 4" tall, but as a young man I could envision him in his full kit climbing all over me like a cat!

They lived through depression,.. fought against World wide domination and won,.. and those who were lucky enough to return home, were the very engines who drove the post war economies and built the times of plenty with all the social perks they had not know of as a child, but were sure as hell not leaving the status quo in the country in regards to the well being of their families, like what had happened to their fathers who returned from the Great War had done.

"The Greatest Generation" to quote Brokaw, ...and I have to totally agree! Sadly,..soon they will all have faded into history one by one like my Grandfathers generation did a decade or so ago from the Great War, and it will be a very different place for me after growing up, working, and living next to these men, a sort of melancholy to come I believe.
 
The guy doesn't need permission from anybody to do anything. He wears his permission over his left pocket.

+1

Good on him for making the trip.

...is still such a complete badass....

Love it!

"The Greatest Generation"

And this vet is still showing them why his was "the greatest generation" ..... getting it done, when it needs to get done!



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It is both sad and ridiculous how "younger" people automatically assume the "aged" are somehow all doddering old fools who have to be led around by the hand. It must be very irritating and insulting to put up with and we'll all find out in due time just how annoying and insulting it is! Every generation seems to have done less and learned less than the one before it; at least since 1914.
 
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Full story: http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-sussex-27735086

With a full video interview with Mr. Jordan: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/10881513/Pensioner-who-hid-medals-and-absconded-from-care-home-found-at-D-Day-celebrations-in-France.html

A World War Two veteran who disappeared from his nursing home to attend the D-Day commemorations in France is on his way back to the UK.

Bernard Jordan, 89, left the home in Hove unannounced at 10:30 BST on Thursday and was reported missing to Sussex Police that evening.

Staff later discovered he had joined other veterans in France.

The former Royal Navy officer said he hoped his trip would not land him in trouble.

On Friday evening, it was confirmed Mr Jordan was on an overnight ferry and had been given a cabin, meals and a transfer back to his nursing home.
Bernard Jordan with a photo of himself as mayor Staff could not get Bernard Jordan on an accredited tour to Normandy so he made his own way there

Prior to embarking, Mr Jordan told ITV News: "I have been here last year and I have been here obviously this time... but if I am still about I shall try next year's as well."

Asked if he would be in trouble when he returned home, he added: "I might be, but I hope not."

Ship's liaison officer Sonia Pittam, who met Mr Jordan on his way to France, said: "I knew he was a game old boy.

"He certainly has his wits about him, he didn't say much about the landings, just how pleased he was to be on board and couldn't believe how everyone was looking after them [veterans] and all the people waving on the route to the harbour entrance.

"He kept saying, 'All this for us'."

Peter Curtis, chief executive of Gracewell Care Homes, said he had spoken to Mr Jordan's guide and added: "He found it all very emotional - much more than he was expecting, which is why he wants to come home early."

He said he thought Mr Jordan wanted to be back at the care home with his wife Irene, and added that he would be meeting the veteran when he disembarks the ferry.

Mr Jordan, who was mayor of Hove from 1995-96, is a resident of The Pines nursing home in Hove.
'Missing with medals'

Hundreds of veterans marked the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings in France, with events on the beaches of Normandy.

The landings were the first stage of the invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe.

Earlier, it was believed care home staff stopped Mr Jordan from going to the events.
Bernard Jordan Bernard Jordan served in the Royal Navy

Brighton and Hove police had tweeted: "90 year old veteran reported missing from care home. Turns out they'd said no to him going to #DDay70 but he went anyway #fightingspirit"

The pensioner had gone out wearing a grey raincoat and a jacket underneath with his war medals on, Sussex Police said.

A police spokesman earlier said: "We have spoken to the veteran who called the home today and are satisfied that the pensioner is fine and that his friends are going to ensure he gets back to Hove safely over the next couple of days after the D-Day celebrations finish.

"Once the pensioner is home, we will go and have a chat with him to check he is OK."

Nev Kemp, the police commander for the City of Brighton & Hove, tweeted: "Love this: 89yr old veteran reported missing by care home who said he can't go to Normandy for #DDay70 remembrance. We've found him there!"

But Mr Curtis said it was "definitely not the case" that Mr Jordan was banned from attending the D-Day commemorations.

He said: "Mr Jordan has full capacity, which means that he can come and go from the home as he pleases, which he does on most days.

"At no stage was he banned from going to the commemorations."
'Disappointment over tour'

Staff had in fact tried to get Mr Jordan on to an accredited tour with the Royal British Legion, he added, but it had not been possible because of the last-minute nature of the request.

Mr Curtis said: "Mr Jordan was reported missing to the police yesterday evening as a matter of caution because he did not return from his normal trip to town.

"When he left, [he] had not told us he was still intent on trying to get to Normandy."

And he said staff at the company were "in awe" of the part Mr Jordan had played in the D-Day invasion.

According to the company's blog, Mr Jordan has lived in Hove all his life and at the home since January.

It said: "He served in the Second World War in the Royal Navy and upon returning married his sweetheart, Irene."

Brighton councillor Les Hamilton, who preceded Mr Jordan as mayor of Hove said the 89-year-old veteran had previously attended the 50th and 60th memorial services in Normandy.

"The memorial services meant a lot to him. He clearly didn't want to miss what might be his last one."
 
Good on him for doing what he wanted to do. These were brave men and deserve so much respect.

My son and I just spent a few hours with Sniper Sgt. Alexander" Sandy" Scott who is 91 and a amazing man. He shouldered the No4T as if he graduated from training yesterday.
 
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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:

^^^
A big TOAST to both these guys!!!
 
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