WWII history of sorts, but an interesting story:
http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/08/20/4939264-scottish-piper-who-led-troops-on-d-day-diesBy Christopher Hampson
As U.S. combat troops pull back into Kuwait from Iraq, there’s another war being remembered in Britain this week, as yet one more old hero passes on.
Billy Millin stands out among the many courageous people of World War II for the uniqueness of his contribution to the Allied victory: He played the bagpipes.
Billy Millin, who landed British troops on D-Day, returns to Normandy in 1995. Here, he stands next to Josette Gouellain, who asked him to play her a song back in 1945. Mallin played "The Nut Brown Maiden," in admiration of the little girl's hair and eyes.
Piper Millin was on the personal staff of the legendary commando leader Lord Lovat. Both were Scots -- Lovat hereditary chief of the Clan Fraser -- and like every one I’ve ever met from that land, fiercely proud of their nation.
When the 1st Special Service Brigade hit the Normandy beaches on D-Day, Lovat ordered Millin to strike up his pipes. Millin jumped straight into the knee-deep water in his kilt and belted out “Highland Laddie.” He kept going, even when the man behind him was shot dead.
On the beach, Millin marched up and down the water’s edge under withering enemy fire, urging his comrades forward with his music and boosting their morale.
One soldier said many years later that the skirl of Billy’s pipes had lifted his spirits, reminding him of home and why he was fighting.
Millin stayed with his unit as it advanced through France over the following days, playing whenever he was ordered to by Lovat.
As they reached Pegasus Bridge – another famous chapter in the history of those days – Millin again piped the troops across under sniper fire. “It seemed,” he said, “a very long bridge.”
After the slaughter of the First World War, the British government had barred pipers from leading the charge.
Lovat told Millin: “But that’s the English War Office. You and I are both Scottish, and that doesn’t apply.”
German prisoners said they hadn’t shot Millin because they thought he had gone off his head. They’d confused courage and pride with madness.
Millin died on Tuesday at 87. His gallantry won him the French Croix de guerre, and was memorialized in the movie “The Longest Day.” A statue is being erected in his honor near Sword Beach.
His family described him as a “great Scottish hero.”
Friday was 70 years ago to the day that Prime Minister Winston Churchill paid tribute to other heroes of that war.
In August and September 1940 the Royal Air Force was locked in a fierce battle with the German Luftwaffe in the skies over England. The actions of those young pilots in what Churchill called the Battle of Britain were crucial in preventing the invasion of these islands.
Churchill famously summed up their contribution in a speech to the House of Commons on Aug. 20, 1940: “Never in the field of human conflict,” he said, “was so much owed by so many to so few.”
At the end of that speech, Churchill said something else – less well remembered - that was to have a lasting impact on both the U.K. and the United States – an observation that is felt today as U.S. troops pull out of Iraq.
Churchill introduced the first phase of a growing strategic alliance between Britain and the United States. It would mean, he said, that “These two great organizations of the English-speaking democracies … will have to be somewhat mixed up together in some of their affairs for mutual and general advantage. For my part, looking out upon the future, I do not view that process with any misgivings.”
Seventy years on, British and U.S. troops are still “mixed up together” – and losing their lives – in conflicts like Iraq and Afghanistan.