Limited edition VE Day Royal Mint coin

Royal Mint has issued a limited edition Alderney £5 Platinum Proof coin to commemorate 70 years since ‘Victory in Europe’ was declared

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The Alderney anniversary platinum coin. Image credit: Royal Mint.

The Royal Mint has issued a limited edition coin to commemorate 70 years since the Second World War hostilities in Europe finally ceased in May 1945, and ‘Victory in Europe’ was declared.

The six-year wartime struggle had plunged Europe into darkness as the conflict affected billions of people; a ‘world’ war in the true sense of the word.

Finally, at 7.40pm on Monday 7 May, 1945, the Ministry of Information in London issued a short statement confirming that war in Europe was over: “In accordance with arrangements between the three great powers, tomorrow, Tuesday, will be treated as Victory in Europe Day and regarded as a holiday.”

Tens of thousands of people flooded the streets of London to celebrate, congregating in Trafalgar Square, Piccadilly Circus and filling The Mall. The following day, Tuesday 8 May, ‘Victory in Europe’ day saw the festivities continue. Street parties were organised across the country, with people sharing food in the austere spirit of the times.

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The Alderney anniversary platinum coin. Image credit: Royal Mint.

Each year, VE Day is marked as a reminder of the relief felt by so many as war in Europe came to a close, and a pledge to educate the generations that follow, in the hope that a repeat of the atrocities of the Second World War will be prevented.

The coin’s reverse design was produced by one of The Royal Mint’s senior engravers, Lee R Jones, who also designed the 70th anniversary of D-Day £5 coin, which captures the courage and sacrifice made by those ‘rank and file’ troops on the ground.

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The Alderney anniversary platinum coin in its case. Image credit: Royal Mint.

Lee said “The remembrance of the Second World War isn’t just about the great historical figures, the leaders, the politicians, the generals. It’s about the sacrifice and struggle of the ordinary people. This was a war with a terrible reach, extending far beyond the frontlines and battlefields. 50 million people lost their lives, millions more were injured. Every family experienced loss or hardship and contributed to the war effort in some way. The design for this coin drills down to street level on that welcome day when war in Europe was finally over. I hope I have given a glimpse into a personal window, to a country that was battered and bruised, but finally able to erupt in a carnival of celebration and reclaim those bombed out streets for a party to end all parties, their freedom and identity secured.”