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Claude Choules
Claude Choules
CPO Claude Choules (1936)
Born (1901-03-03)3 March 1901
Died 5 May 2011(2011-05-05)
(aged 7002110000000000000110 years, 700163000000000000063 days)
Place of birth Pershore, Worcestershire, England[1]
Place of death Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Allegiance United Kingdom United Kingdom
Australia Australia
Service/branch United Kingdom Royal Navy
Australia Royal Australian Navy
Years of service

1915–1956:

  • 1915–1917 RN trainee
  • 1917–1926 RN
  • 1926–1931 RAN
  • 1931–1932 RAN reserves
  • 1932–1950 RAN ancilliary
  • 1950–1956 RAN NDP
Rank Chief Petty Officer
Commands held Acting Torpedo Officer, HMAS Leeuwin (Fremantle naval base)
Chief Demolition Officer, HMAS Leeuwin
Battles/wars World War I
World War II
ClaudeChoules1915

Claude Choules as a RN trainee (1915).

Claude&Ethel1926

Choules and his future wife Ethel Wildgoose, aboard SS Diogenes (1926).

ClaudeChoules1929-HMASCanberra

PO Choules aboard HMAS Canberra (1929).

HMAS Choules Sydney 21122011

HMAS Choules in December 2011.

Claude Stanley Choules (/ˈʃlz/;[2] 3 March 1901 – 5 May 2011) was the last World War I combat veteran,[3][4][5] and was the last military witness to the scuttling of the German fleet in Scapa Flow. He was also the last veteran to have served in both world wars, and the last seaman from the First World War. At the time of his death, he was also the third oldest verified military veteran in the world and the oldest known living man in Australia.[6][7] He was the seventh-oldest living man in the world. Choules became the oldest man born in the United Kingdom following the death of Stanley Lucas on 21 June 2010. Choules died in Perth, Western Australia, at the age of 110.[8][9] He had been the oldest British-born man; following his death, that honour went to the Reverend Reginald Dean (1902–2013). In December 2011, the landing ship HMAS Choules was named after him, only the second Australian Navy vessel named after a sailor.

Early life[]

Claude Choules was born in Pershore,[1] Worcestershire, on 3 March 1901 and raised in nearby Wyre Piddle. The son of Harry and Madeline (née Winn), Claude was one of seven children, although two died in early childhood. The surviving siblings were Douglas, Leslie, Phyllis, and Gwendoline.[10] His mother left home when Claude was five, returning to the stage as an actress, and he and his older brothers were raised by his father. His older sister Phyllis lived with the family of a paternal uncle, while his younger sister Gwendoline was adopted by the family of a paternal aunt.[11] Both Claude and his older brothers went to Pershore National Boys' School (see national school), though Douglas (born 1893) and Leslie (born 1894) emigrated to Western Australia in 1911.[12]

Choules was 13 at the start of World War I, and the family received letters from Douglas[13] and Leslie[14][15][16] who had joined the Australian Imperial Force and landed at Anzac Cove and fought during the Gallipoli Campaign. Choules was able to leave school when he turned 14, at which point he attempted to enlist in the army as a bugler boy but was rejected as too young.[17]

Naval training[]

Choules' father then arranged for him to train to join the navy instead, and in April 1915, at age 14, he joined the nautical training ship TS Mercury.[18]

This training ship was moored on the River Hamble, near Southampton, Hampshire, and had a dormitory ship called HMS President that had previously been HMS Gannet.[19] The commander of the Mercury training site was the cricketer C. B. Fry, and Choules' time there included trips to Netley Hospital as part of the Mercury's dancing team.[20] The examinations taken by Choules following his training on the Mercury qualified him to attend the advanced class on the naval training ship HMS Impregnable situated at the Devonport naval base in Plymouth. Choules transferred there on 10 October 1916, for what was to be the final stage of his training before joining the Royal Navy's Grand Fleet.[21]

Military service[]

On 20 October 1917, Choules joined the battleship Revenge, which was the flagship of the First Battle Squadron and stationed at Scapa Flow in the Orkney Islands. While serving aboard it, Choules saw action against a German zeppelin,[22] and witnessed the surrender of the German Imperial Navy at the Firth of Forth in 1918, ten days after the Armistice, as well as witnessing the scuttling of the German fleet in Scapa Flow.[23] this is cool :)

In 1926, along with 11 other Royal Navy senior sailors, Choules travelled to Australia on loan as an instructor at Flinders Naval Depot. He travelled in SS Diogenes on a 6-week voyage from London to Melbourne, and it was on this voyage that he met his future wife Ethel Wildgoose who was travelling to Australia to carry out work for the Victoria League.[24] Choules decided to transfer permanently to the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) after sampling and agreeing with the Australian way of life. In fact, he was only two days younger than the RAN, which was established on 1 March 1901.[25]

He took his discharge from the RAN in 1931, but remained in the reserves and rejoined the RAN in 1932 as a Chief Petty Officer torpedo and anti-submarine instructor. He never returned to England after leaving.[26]

During the Second World War, Choules was the acting Torpedo Officer at HMAS Leeuwin, the naval base at Fremantle, Western Australia,[27] and also served as the Chief Demolition Officer on the western side of the Australian continent.[23] He was tasked with sabotaging Fremantle harbours and related oil storage tanks in the event of a Japanese invasion.[27] Choules was also responsible for dealing with the first German mine to wash up on Australian soil during the war, near Esperance, Western Australia.[27]

Choules remained in the RAN after the Second World War and transferred to the Naval Dockyard Police (NDP) to allow him to remain in service until 1956, as retirement from the RAN for ratings in those days was at age 50, while personnel could serve until 55 years old in the NDP.[28][29]

Later life[]

Choules and his wife Ethel were married for 76 years, until her death at age 98.[28] Choules shunned celebrations of the Armistice, because he was against the glorification of war.[30] His autobiography The Last of the Last was first published in Perth in 2009,[31] followed by an annotated edition for UK readers in 2010.

On 6 August 2009, although almost blind and deaf, he was still mentally active and gave a television interview.[32]

In late April 2010, Choules' daughter Daphne Choules-Edinger reported that his health was declining and he could no longer give interviews.[33] He celebrated his 110th birthday in March 2011.[34] In the final years of his life, he resided at Gracewood Hostel in Salter Point, a suburb of Perth.

Claude Choules appeared in the BBC documentaries The Last Tommy (2005) and Harry Patch – The Last Tommy (2009). After his death, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard stated "Mr Choules and his generation made a sacrifice for our freedom and liberty we will never forget".[35]

Death and funeral[]

Choules died on 4 May 2011.[36] He was survived by 3 children, 11 grandchildren, 22 great-grandchildren and 3 great-great grandchildren.[28] He was given a naval funeral in Fremantle, Western Australia on 20 May 2011. Guests included the West Australian Premier Colin Barnett, state Opposition Leader Eric Ripper and federal Defence Minister Stephen Smith, who gave a reading during the service. Choules's son Adrian gave the eulogy.[37]

On 13 December 2011, the former Royal Fleet Auxiliary landing ship Largs Bay was commissioned into the Royal Australian Navy as HMAS Choules.[38] The decision to name the ship after Claude Choules came about because of his status as the last surviving veteran of World War I; the naming recognises the service of enlisted sailors as part of celebrations of the navy's centenary (the ship is only the second vessel named after a sailor), and also acknowledges the ship's previous service under British control (Choules served in both the British and Australian navies during his career).[38][39]

Choules was the last surviving male veteran of World War I, and the last surviving veteran who saw active service. His death left Florence Green (19 February 1901 – 4 February 2012) as the last surviving veteran.[40]

Awards[]

In November 2009, Choules became the oldest recipient of the Australian Defence Medal. (The medal was established in 2006 to recognise members of the Australian Defence Force who have served for more than four years after 3 September 1945).[41][42]

He was also awarded the British War Medal 1914–18, the Victory Medal 1914–18, the War Medal 1939–45, the Australia Service Medal 1939–45, the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal, the Centenary Medal and the Royal Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal with Clasp.[41][42][43][44]

British War Medal BAR Victory medal (UK) ribbon War Medal 1939–1945 (UK) ribbon File:Australian Service Medal 1939-45 ribbon.png

ElizabethIICoronationRibbon Centenary Medal (Australia) ribbon Australian Defence Medal (Australia) ribbon Naval Long Service and Good Conduct Medal (UK) ribbon

British War Medal BAR British War Medal
Victory medal (UK) ribbon Victory Medal 1914–18
War Medal 1939–1945 (UK) ribbon War Medal 1939–45
File:Australian Service Medal 1939-45 ribbon.png Australia Service Medal 1939–45
ElizabethIICoronationRibbon Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal 1953
Centenary Medal (Australia) ribbon Centenary Medal 2001[43]
Australian Defence Medal (Australia) ribbon Australian Defence Medal 2009[41]
Naval Long Service and Good Conduct Medal (UK) ribbon Royal Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal with clasp to denote 30 years service

See also[]

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