Red Devils join tribute to fallen Arnhem soldiers

Harry Parkhill,in Woodhall Spaand
Eleanor Maslin,East Yorkshire and Lincolnshire
Harry Parkhill/BBC An action shot of the silhouette of a parachuter in freefall to the ground. The parachute is red, white and black and a large union jack flag is attached to them. The sky is blue in the background.Harry Parkhill/BBC
The Red Devils, the Parachute Regiment's display team, put on a display at the Arnhem Oak memorial event in Woodhall Spa

An oak tree sapling has been planted as part of a ceremony to honour fallen soldiers who died in the Netherlands.

The Arnhem Oak dedication ceremony took place at Woodhall Spa Cricket Ground, representing those who trained in Lincolnshire for Operation Market Garden in World War Two.

The sapling was grown from an acorn collected beside the Arnhem Oosterbeek War Cemetery in the Netherlands, where 1,764 allied servicemen are buried.

Colonel Andy Wareing, from the Red Devils, the Parachute Regiment's display team, which put on a display, said: "We're here to remember those brave service people who were deployed all those years ago."

Operation Market Garden was an airborne operation in 1944 designed to secure the River Rhine crossings and advance into northern Germany during the war.

The Parachute Regimental Association (PRA) said many of the airborne forces were stationed in Lincolnshire, including Woodhall Spa, before the operation.

Harry Parkhill/BBC A military man is wearing a burgundy beret with a silver logo on it and a brown coat with a yellow tie and white shirt. He has several medals displayed on the brown coat. Behind him a field can be seen with trees with people dotted about and a green military truck in the distance.Harry Parkhill/BBC
Colonel Andy Wareing, from the Red Devils, says being at the event earlier was an "enormous privilege"

The remembrance event held earlier included the PRA, Royal British Legion and local schools.

Displays of military vehicles were part of the event, along with speeches and participation from schools in the "Flower Children" tradition of Oosterbeek, where Dutch children tend the graves of the fallen.

Wareing, the Red Devils' assistant colonel commandment for the north of England, said: "It's an enormous privilege. The tributes should go to all those hardworking people who arranged the event."

Metal wire surrounds a planted sapling of an oak tree on a field. Small wooden crosses with poppies can be seen planted below it along with some tulips laid on the soil. Behind is a metal barrier covering a path with terraced houses behind it.
The sapling from the oak tree was planted at Woodhall Spa Cricket Ground earlier

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