VE Day thank you for 104 year-old from Glasgow

IT was in 1939, when the ­British public were wakening up to the impending dangers of war – with the hurried construction of air raid shelters and barrage ­balloons hovering in the skies above – that Margaret Miller signed up with the Women’s Voluntary ­Services.
Margaret Miller, who joined the WVS in 1939, enjoys VE Day celebrations. Picture: Michael CrabtreeMargaret Miller, who joined the WVS in 1939, enjoys VE Day celebrations. Picture: Michael Crabtree
Margaret Miller, who joined the WVS in 1939, enjoys VE Day celebrations. Picture: Michael Crabtree

Today, Mrs Miller – now 104 – is the oldest serving volunteer with the organisation now known as the Royal Voluntary ­Service.

And now she is to receive a ­special thank you as the ­charity ­celebrates VE Day, marking the 70th anniversary of the Allied victory ending the Second World War in ­Europe.

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Nicknamed “the army that Hitler forgot”, the volunteer women in their green uniforms formed a formidable civilian force, numbering one million by 1943.

Their duties included first aid and providing food for ­people injured in bombing raids, as well as ­helping to ­evacuate and billet children.

Mrs Miller, from Springboig, Glasgow, was sent to the city’s Royal Infirmary where she supported the injured, among them wounded troops.

She said: “I decided to volunteer in 1939 because I thought it was time to help the war effort.

“During that time we had wounded soldiers brought to local hospitals, so I visited those soldiers who had no family in Scotland on VE Day [8 May, 1945, 70 years ago today].

“I remember feeling a marvellous sense of ­relief that the war was over.”

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Mrs Miller still volunteers at a club for stroke victims, which she set up more than 35 years ago, and in 2013 became one of a handful of people to be awarded a ­second British Empire Medal. “I started the first stroke club in Scotland because there was nothing else being done to help people who had experienced a stroke, and I still volunteer there as often as possible today,” she said.

David McCullough, chief ­executive of the charity, said: “I would like to say a huge thank you to the women who built the foundations of the Royal ­Voluntary Service we know today by providing practical help to anyone who needed it during the Second World War.

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“Without their compassion and commitment to the cause, life on the home front may well have fallen apart. VE Day must have been a very special day for our ­volunteers who worked tirelessly throughout the war.”