• This topic has 33 replies, 28 voices, and was last updated 14 years ago by tsr.
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  • The Last Tommy
  • grahamh
    Free Member

    It seems that Harry Patch has passed on.

    stratobiker
    Free Member

    RIP Harry

    noteeth
    Free Member

    RIP and Thank You.

    avdave2
    Full Member

    Only one Britain left now who served in WW1.

    RIP Harry

    KINGTUT
    Free Member

    RIP.

    Only one Britain left now who served in WW1.

    I thought Harry Patch was the last?

    grumm
    Free Member

    Think he was the last who fought on the western front.

    mastiles_fanylion
    Free Member

    Yeah – he was the last survivor that fought in the trenches – the real killing fields of the Great War.

    As above – thank you – you were more of a man than almost any of us could ever hope to be.

    JohnClimber
    Free Member

    A sad, sad day and an end of a era for all of us.

    Let's not forget what they did for us all 😥

    Drac
    Full Member

    RIP you've earned it.

    CaptainFlashheart
    Free Member

    Glass raised.

    Rest in peace, old chap!

    backhander
    Free Member

    Oh no.
    That's really upsetting.
    RIP Harry.
    I shall have to raise a glass of west country cider tonight/today.

    Moses
    Full Member

    RIP.

    And in memory of my grandfather, MC at Ypres.

    tails
    Free Member

    oohhh!! 🙁 i just read about this on BBC on return from my ride. You chose a lovely day to go out on 🙂 I came to see you and your friends last november in london, was a nice if rather moving occasion. Perhaps one day if were really lucky people will not have to be as brave as you. Rest In Peace x

    ChatsworthMusters
    Free Member

    Went to Paschendaele/Ypres a couple of weeks ago. It's a very sobering place. It's little wonder that those who survived didn't speak much about it, my grandfather included. We all owe an enormous debt to Harry Patch and the others.

    Tyne Cot cemetery has a wall with approx 30,000 names carved into it, and the Menin Gate in Ypres has more than twice that number. Every name represents a soldier with no known grave. And The Somme is worse. Hopefully nothing like that will ever happen again.

    pantsonfire
    Free Member

    I shall raise a glass to Harry tonight

    redthunder
    Free Member

    RIP Harry

    Remember them all. All killed and wounded old and current wars.

    In memory to my great grandfather… Hill 60 ww1

    http://www.lightinfantry.org.uk/regiments/rgbwli/rgbw_pruett.htm

    johnners
    Free Member

    By a strange coincidence I was just leafing through "Forgotten Voices of the Great War".

    They're not forgotten here.

    scraprider
    Free Member

    R.I.P , and thank you , and all the un named, because they are not named , dont mean we forget them.we houner them by speaking there names………………..

    tankslapper
    Free Member

    redthunder – impressive website

    RIP Mr.Patch – end of an era.

    Ambrose
    Full Member

    One of the most poignant of memories was driving north through France about 15 years ago. My 2 y.o. son needed to stretch his legs, so we stopped at a war grave cemetery. We took Robert out of his car seat, and walked him round the graveyard. A beautiful sunny evening. Walking back to the car we noticed a small door set into the gatepost, containing the book listing all the graves. It was a re-worked originally German cemetery, the line had later moved and passed through it and a trench had been dug through the graves. It was a tint graveyard, beside a quiet country road. It is one of hundreds.

    We had Governments that would require us to do these abhorent things and a society that (initially?) accepted it.

    lest we forget

    Harry Patch, R.I.P

    Big Respect

    tankslapper
    Free Member

    My Uncle David was killed on the Somme in 1915 his brother, we have only found out as my Uncle Jimmy never talked about this, fought for the British in WWI in Arabia where he operated as an interpreter. He then immigrated and led the Canadian Highlanders on the Dieppe Landings in WWII! Incredibly he then returned home (His only wound being a bayonet stab from one of his own men who tried to run away) and was a high ranking officer in the police in Ontario. Now this is the strange bit, when he died his funeral was attended by large numbers of police and convicts. We have only just discovered the reason for this; apparently every single person he ever convicted he then spent time talking to them in prison to get them to 'mend their ways' due to his Christian values.

    Last of a different breed I guess (or a glutton for punishment!)

    Good to reflect.

    uplink
    Free Member

    So long fella – you've earned the rest

    I'll never forget – or let my kids forget – what you & many, many like you gave us

    swamp_boy
    Full Member

    RIP old feller

    Both my granddads were in the trenches, both survived but one got a dose of gas and was never well, died the 1950s, grandma made it till the 90s, was widowed longer than she was married to him. I knew the other but he never said anything about it, though I still have his billy can and a German bayonet he brought back.

    We keep saying never again, but it hasn't stopped.

    Different breed in some ways maybe, but we are still producing people capable of great sacrifices, shouldn't forget them either.

    hora
    Free Member

    He had a long innings. Unlike the youngsters who were needlessly slaughtered. 🙁

    tankslapper
    Free Member

    A case of the old lie Hora I'm afraid – Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori 😥

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    Should be a state funeral really. Considering what being the Last Tommy represented, it's unthinkable that he won't get one.

    Shame.

    montylikesbeer
    Full Member

    hats off to the lot of them, brave men and women who gave everything.

    ChatsworthMusters
    Free Member

    There's an audio presentation of Wilfred Owen's "Dulce et Decorum Est" in the Ypres museum. Tear jerking. Even the teenagers, and there were plenty about were silenced by it. It was good to see so many young folk, of all nationalities going round; education will hopefully stop a repetition.

    dropoff
    Full Member

    Very sad day. Will raise a glass to this gentleman, the last of a special breed.

    hora
    Free Member

    Tyne Cot last August. I've got to admit I was fighting back tears. The sacrifices made in World War I and II to keep us free 🙁

    hora
    Free Member

    What passing bells for these who die as cattle?
    Only the monstrous anger of the guns.
    Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle
    Can patter out their hasty orisons.
    No mockeries now for them; no prayers nor bells;
    Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs,
    The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;
    And bugles calling for them from sad shires.
    What candles may be held to speed them all?
    Not in the hands of boys, but in their eyes
    Shall shine the holy glimmers of good-byes.
    The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall;
    Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
    And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds

    ourmaninthenorth
    Full Member

    Went to the Somme memorial to those with no known grave – 72,000 allied soldiers.

    Extraordinary.

    tsr
    Free Member

    I will be paying my respects at Cathedral Green tomorrow.

    Roads are being shut tonight with thousands expected to line the route.

    The bells of Wells Cathedral will toll 111 times to mark every year of Harry's life at 1100. It is expected this will take around 50 minutes.

    BBC link

    Harry Patch, R.I.P

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