Harry Patch was born on 17th June 1898. He served as a private in the Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry at the Battle of Passchendaele in 1917. He was married in 1919 and had two sons. Between the wars he worked as a plumber and on building sites in the Bristol area, and when the Second World War broke out, he served first as a fire fighter with the Auxiliary Fire Service throughout the Bath Blitz, and later alongside American troops in the run-up to D-Day. In 2002 he attended the seventy-fifth anniversary of the inauguration of the Menin Gate at Ypres, and in 2005 he took part in the BBC TV documentary The Last Tommy and was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Bristol. Harry Patch died on 25th July 2009.
The Last Fighting Tommy, is the extraordinary and moving story of a man whose life has spanned six monarchs and twenty Prime Ministers.
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