<P> Patch was born in the village of Combe Down, near Bath, Somerset, England . He appears in the 1901 Census as a two - year - old boy along with his stonemason father William John Patch, mother Elizabeth Ann (née Morris) and older brothers George Frederick and William Thomas at a house called "Fonthill". The family are recorded at the same address "Fonthill Cottage" in the 1911 census . His elder brothers are recorded as a carpenter and banker mason . Longevity ran in Patch's family; his father lived to 82, his mother to 94, his brother George to 95 and his brother William to 87 . Patch left school in 1913 and became an apprentice plumber in Bath . </P> <P> In October 1916, during World War I, he was conscripted into the British Army as a private, reporting for duty at Tolland Barracks, Taunton . During the winter of 1916--17 he was promoted lance - corporal but was demoted after a fist fight with a soldier, who had taken his boots from his billet, and he saw no further promotion . Patch went through a series of short - lived attachments to several regiments, including the Royal Warwickshire Regiment before being posted after completing training to the 7th (Service) Battalion, Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry, serving as an assistant gunner in a Lewis gun section . Patch arrived in France in June 1917 . He fought on the Western Front at the Battle of Passchendaele (also known as the Third Battle of Ypres) and was injured in the groin, when a shell exploded overhead at 22: 30 on 22 September 1917, killing three of his comrades . He was removed from the front line and returned to England on 23 December 1917 . Patch referred to 22 September as his personal Remembrance Day . He was still convalescing on the Isle of Wight when the Armistice with Germany was declared the following November . </P> <P> When the war ended, I don't know if I was more relieved that we'd won or that I didn't have to go back . Passchendaele was a disastrous battle--thousands and thousands of young lives were lost . It makes me angry . Earlier this year, I went back to Ypres to shake the hand of Charles Kuentz, Germany's only surviving veteran from the war . It was emotional . He is 107 . We've had 87 years to think what war is . To me, it's a licence to go out and murder . Why should the British government call me up and take me out to a battlefield to shoot a man I never knew, whose language I couldn't speak? All those lives lost for a war finished over a table . Now what is the sense in that? </P> <P> After the war, Patch returned to work as a plumber, during which time he spent four years working on the Wills Memorial Building in Bristol, before becoming manager of the plumbing company's branch in Bristol . A year above the age to be called up for military service at the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, he became a part - time fireman in Bath, dealing with the Baedeker raids . Later in the war he moved to Street, Somerset, where he ran a plumbing company until his retirement at the age of 65 . </P>

What were harry patch lasting views on war
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