"You intended to unleash disaster on the community of Luton. Your plans were intelligent, calculating and selfish.
"We were screaming 'we want the King' and 'we want the Queen'."Victory in Europe Day, known as VE Day, on 8 May marks the day the Allies formally accepted Germany's surrender in 1945.
Mrs Hollingbery said she was among an enormous group of people when Churchill addressed the crowd, but despite being "so overcome, I couldn't hear" she said it had been a "wonderful" moment.Describing her military career, she said she was not initially sure which of the forces would be the most suitable."I didn't know which one to apply for and I tried on all the hats and I didn't like the way my hair came out of the army and air force," she said.
"I tried on a WRNS hat and I thought 'that's nice, it'll keep my hair down'."However, after a few weeks she and five others were sent to Eastcote, near Harrow.
"We had a meeting there and they told us 'you mustn't do this, you mustn't do that, you have to sign the Secrets Act," she said.
"We were told it was a very important job.""I think it was important that the tank remained part of the entire structure because there are very few of them," says senior conservation adviser Connor McNeill.
"The large sites across London that have been redeveloped have almost in every case lost those tanks and all that's retained is the framework."Great Yarmouth was a rare example of where everything was intact and it's believed the tank itself was a particularly rare form of construction of which very few remain across the country.
"And its importance and historical value will be diminished by the loss of that integral structure and the way it worked."He says the concern is that an important part of the building might be removed without any guarantee about the site's future use.