Wartime sweethearts reunite after 70 years apart

British woman and US serviceman lost contact after meeting in London before D-Day

Images of   Norwood Thomas and Joyce Morris. Photograph: ABC  News screengrab
Images of Norwood Thomas and Joyce Morris. Photograph: ABC News screengrab

An 88-year-old British woman has reunited with her wartime sweetheart after more than 70 years apart.

Joyce Morris and 93-year-old former US serviceman Norwood Thomas laughed as they hugged each other after Mr Thomas flew from the US to the Australian city of Adelaide to reconnect with his long-lost love.

"This is about the most wonderful thing that could have happened to me," Mr Thomas said, in a reunion broadcast in Australia on Channel 10's The Project.

“Good,” Ms Morris replied with a laugh. “We’re going to have a wonderful fortnight.”

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She was a 17-year-old girl and Mr Thomas was a 21-year-old paratrooper when they met in London shortly before D-Day in the second World War.

After the war, he returned to the US.

The pair wrote letters to each other, and Mr Thomas asked Ms Morris to come to the US to marry him, but she misunderstood and thought he had found someone else, so she stopped writing.

The two eventually married other people.

Mr Thomas’s wife died in 2001.

Online research

Ms Morris divorced her husband after 30 years.

Last year, she asked one of her sons to look for Mr Thomas online, and they found his name in an article about D-Day in The Virginian Pilot newspaper.

The couple reconnected by Skype, and after their story went public, hundreds of people made donations to help fund Mr Thomas’s trip to Australia from his home town in Virginia Beach.

The two are planning to spend Valentine’s Day together.

PA