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It is an honour to be invited to write the Foreword for this new edition of The Memory Endures by Reg Curtis.When Reg Curtis enlisted with the Grenadier Guards in 1937, little did he know that two years later Britain would be plunged into the Second World War.
On behalf of Support Our Paras, The Parachute Regiment and Airborne Forces Charity, I would like to thank our veteran Reg for his service and for his steadfast loyalty.
Reg was there at the creation: he volunteered in 1940 and was one of the founding members of 1st Parachute Battalion; he fought in North Africa, where 1st Parachute Brigade earned the name ‘Red Devils’; he fought in Sicily. He was shot and lost a leg at Arnhem.
Reg never forgot his comrades. He dedicated this book to “all my Airborne friends who never came back, whose actions made it possible for me and other Airborne friends to enjoy over seventy years living.”
For the rest of his life Reg stayed in touch with his surviving brothers in arms and at the time of his death it is believed that he was the last man standing from the original 1940 volunteers who called themselves No. 2 Commando, 11th SAS, 1st Parachute Battalion.
Before he passed away in January 2016, Reg pledged income from this book to our charity. It was his wish to support soldiers who may be experiencing circumstances similar to his own, following the amputation of his right leg after the Battle of Arnhem. We are deeply grateful.
Reg’s family continues this support in his memory, with all profits kindly pledged in perpetuity. We extend our most sincere thanks to them also.
Reg, we salute you. You and your comrades will always be remembered.
Stephen Cooper
Merville Barracks, August 2020
157 pages, Paperback
First published September 17, 2014
This is a story told through one man’s eyes. There are so many different memories held by others, but these are mine. In my 94th year they remain vivid and clear, often more so than recollections of more recent times. I suppose that’s the way it is when you have lived through war. This is a story that begins before the Second World War and runs through it—a time when everyone did their bit and I just played my part. I was already in the Grenadier Guards when war was declared with Germany in September 1939, and when Winston Churchill’s call to volunteer for commando and parachute training came in 1940 it was an easy one to answer. I was privileged to serve my country and am proud to have done so with other pioneers of the Parachute Regiment, whose memory and friendship I hold dear. I have no regrets. Between 1939 and 1945 we took part in the greatest conflict in human history. We won the war, of course, and back home in Britain have now had almost 70 years of peace, for which we can all be grateful. What a shame it is, though, that even the vast scale of suffering we went through was not enough to finally put an end to war itself. I don’t suppose there will ever be one way of agreeing about everything but I can’t help hoping that things will eventually get better for everyone, not just us.All profits from the sale of the The Memory Endures go to the Parachute Regiment Charity, Support Our Paras, providing mobility equipment and disability conversion of vehicles, remedial courses to assist those recovering from wounds, vocational courses to help soldiers transition into civilian life, and more. It was Reg’s wish to support soldiers who may now be experiencing circumstances similar to his own, following the amputation of his right leg in 1944, and his support to the charity continues in his memory. The Memory Endures is available exclusively through Pilots Publishing.