Tank heroes' Victoria Crosses together for VE Day

Indy Almroth-WrightSouth of England
News imageThe Tank Museum Bob Foote and Pip Gardner together sat on top of a tank in Tidworth in 1983. One man is looking out of the tank's entrance and the other is sat on top.The Tank Museum
Bob Foote and Pip Gardner together in Tidworth in 1983

The only two Victoria Cross medals awarded to the Royal Tank Regiment in World War Two will be displayed together for the first time to mark VE Day.

The Victoria Crosses, set to go on show at The Tank Museum in Bovington, Dorset were awarded to Capt Philip 'Pip' Gardner and Maj Gen Henry Robert Bowreman 'Bob' Foote.

The men received the highest military decoration in war for their acts of extreme bravery during the campaign in the Western Desert.

The two Victoria Crosses, along with both men's medal groups, are going on display at the museum to mark the anniversary of VE Day - the end of World War Two in Europe on 8 May 1945.

News imageThe Tank Museum Display cabinet at museum with medals, photographs and typed information.The Tank Museum
The men's medal groups, including their Victoria Crosses and their stories, are going on display

Allied forces battled German and Italian forces in the deserts of north Africa between 1940 and 1943.

Aged 26, Gardner was the first of the pair to be awarded Victoria Cross after risking his life under anti-tank fire to save a badly-wounded soldier.

Bowreman earned his honour for continuing to lead his battalion under heavy artillery fire after he was wounded in the neck and his tank was badly damaged leaving its guns disabled.

Exhibitions manager at the museum, Luke Clark, said: "Both Pip and Bob's Victoria Crosses were the only two awarded to the Royal Tank Regiment during the Second World War, making it incredibly poignant to display together to mark the anniversary of VE Day."

Tuesday, 8 May 1945 was declared Victory in Europe - (VE) Day, and marked the formal end of the European war.

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