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| World War I A place to discuss the Great War(WWI) |
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| "World Traveller" ![]() | Obituary: Henry Allingham BBC NEWS | UK | Oldest WW1 veteran dies aged 113 Cigarettes, whisky and wild, wild women was Henry Allingham's tongue in cheek recipe for his long life, which crossed over three centuries. He was born in south London in June 1896 and brought up by his mother and grandparents following the death of his father, from TB, in 1897. After leaving school he obtained a job as a trainee surgical instrument maker but quickly moved into the motor trade where he worked building car bodies. In 1914 he tried to join the army as a despatch rider but his mother, who was ill, persuaded him to stay at home and nurse her. She died a few months afterwards, age 42, and Henry, who later remembered feeling completely alone and with no purpose in life, joined the fledgling Royal Naval Air Service as a mechanic. After his training he was posted to Great Yarmouth, where he maintained sea planes involved in anti submarine patrols in the North Sea and acted as an air gunner in operations to counter German Zeppelins. He was drafted onto HM trawler Kingfisher which headed north, in May 1916, as part of the British force sent to intercept the German High Seas Fleet at Jutland. Warship at the battle of Jutland The Battle of Jutland ended the threat of the German fleet In what became the only major naval battle of the war, the British lost 14 ships and more than 6,000 lives, but the German fleet never again threatened to put to sea against the Royal Navy. Allingham later recalled watching shells flying across the sea. "There were a lot of dud shells and that saved us from a lot of harm." In 1917 he was posted to the Western Front where the RNAS was tasked with supporting squadrons of the Royal Flying Corps which was operating sorties over the battlefields of the Somme. He found himself in the trenches where he was ordered to neutralise the booby trapped bombs left behind by the retreating German soldiers. On the Western Front He never forgot the conditions on the ground. He later recalled being up to his armpits in water with the smell of mud and rotting flesh all around him. In November 1917 he was posted to an aircraft recovery depot at Dunkirk where he stayed for the remainder of the war. Even here, behind the lines, he was subject to German bombing raids and shellfire from the sea. Six months later he was transferred to the newly formed Royal Air Force after the merger of the RFC and the naval air service. After his discharge from the RAF he went to work for the Ford Motor Company where he remained until he retired. His engineering expertise was called into use again in World War II where he worked on a project designed to neutralise German magnetic mines. Since 1918 he had buried his memories of the war, avoiding reunions and refusing to discuss the subject with his family. Henry Allingham lays a wreath He never forgot the sacrifice of his comrades who failed to return But, in 2005, he was persuaded to unveil an RAF memorial in France and he decided it would have been disrespectful to his former comrades to refuse. For the remainder of his life he was tireless in attending commemorative events, including the 90th anniversary of the Somme, and regularly spoke to schoolchildren about his wartime experiences. On his visit to the Somme in 2006 he was asked how he wanted to be remembered. "I don't" he said, "I want to be forgotten. Remember the others." BBC NEWS | UK | Obituary: Henry Allingham
__________________ ![]() "Success is not Final, Failure is not Fatal, it is the Courage to Continue that Counts" Sir Winston Churchill "To him the People of the World Largely owe the Freedom and Liberties they Enjoy Today" Enscription on Hugh Dowding's (AOC Fighter Command 1936-40) statue in London WW2 Talk: A WW2 Discussion Forum My Photo Collections on Flickr |
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| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: billingham nr middlesbrough uk
Posts: 3,636
| Rest in peace Sir
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| Senior Member |
__________________ Take arrows in your forehead, but never in your back. - Samurai maxim ![]() |
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| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 10,812
| RIP!
__________________ "Pilot to copilot..... what are those mountain goats doing up here in the clouds?" |
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| | #5 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: Canvey Island, Essex
Posts: 4,030
| That only leaves Patch as the very last Tommy of the great war. bye Henry, say hello and thanks to your old mates for us. |
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| | #6 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Corona, California
Posts: 2,506
| Another living link to that history is gone. RIP Mr. Allingham. ![]() Wheels
__________________ Cheers Wheelsup_cavu ![]() Wheels's Photos - Time lapse build of an F/A-18 Super Hornet - Lock N' Load |
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| | #7 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Hurst, Texas
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__________________ ![]() Pillage, then burn. Argue not with dragons, for thou art crunchy and go well on toast. |
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| | #8 |
| Der Crewchief ![]() Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Ansbach, Germany
Posts: 34,081
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__________________ ![]() fly boy:"isnt that the first jet bomber becasue i have flown one in a flight sim before and i know how it handles" |
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| | #9 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 901
| R.I.P Henry.
__________________ "This is the day which the lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it." Psalms 118:24 |
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| | #10 |
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__________________ ![]() "A good fighter pilot, like a good boxer, should have a knockout punch..... You will find one attack you prefer to all others. Work on it till you can do it to perfection... then use it whenever possible." - Captain Reade Tilley, USAAF 7 Victories, WW-II - |
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