Starbuck wrote on Feb 28
th, 2011 at 5:30pm:
Gazza wrote on Feb 28
th, 2011 at 2:34pm:
gazza, claude choules never saw active combat. he was a sailor who served on support ships, i believe. he did witness the surrender of the german fleet, but never saw a shot fired in anger.
the last surviving combat vet of the first world war was harry patch, who was wounded at passchendaele in 1917. he died in 2009, a week after henry allingham, who was the last surviving RAF member of the first world war.
Thanks. I wondered about that as when the pair of them died, I was under the impression they were the final two.
Quote: speaking of, is WWI still engrained in british national consciousness, even among today's youth, now that the vets are all gone?
I think it is to some degree, even though our last government seemed to have a pretty shameful attitude at times towards our national identity. Its more engrained than it used to be, although maybe not as much as it should be.
Quote:i spent a year in newcastle working on a masters degree about ten years ago, and my flatmates and i used to go down to the pub and discuss wars and such...my british friends would talk about WWI quite often and how it effected britain...meanwhile, i'd walk past the newcastle memorial to the WWI dead every day on my way to class. seemed like WWI was ubiquitous over thar....
Well, Britain lost twice as many people in WW1 than we did in WW2, and WW1 has historically been seen as a futile and stupid conflict - unlike the war that followed it two decades later.
Where I live, WW1 is more of a big deal - even though Belfast was heavily bombed in air raids in 1941 - mostly due to the huge loss of life by the 36th Ulster Division at the Battle of the Somme in July 1916. I know quite a few people of my own age who go to France every July without fail to the memorial there.