Centenarian Alfred Gaze, of Oamaru, who celebrates his
100th birthday today at Totara Lodge, reads his birthday
card from the Queen. Photo by David Bruce.
Alfred Gaze's family reckons he is lucky to be able to
celebrate his 100th birthday today.
At least three times during World War 2 he came close to
death and then, when he retired in Oamaru, he fell off the
family home he was building in Lark St, breaking his back,
compressing his spine and reducing his height by about 8cm.
"The thing he was most upset about was, he was then looking
us in the eye.
Before, he could look down on us," his daughter Jean Brown
said yesterday.
At the end of the war, a New Zealand friend went to Mr Gaze's
London home to tell his wife Win he had died in a pig sty in
Poland, but he was greeted at the door by Mr Gaze himself.
Mr Gaze has celebrated some major events, most notably his
75th wedding anniversary in July last year, he and Win's
second diamond anniversary in what is believed to be New
Zealand's longest marriage.
Mrs Gaze died earlier this month.
Mr Gaze was born on January 26, 1910, in Harrow, near London.
When he left school he trained as a plumber, but before
completing his apprenticeship he joined the family building
company.
He recalled listening to the first radio broadcast from
London, watching zeppelins bomb London during World War 1 and
viewing the first broadcasts of television.
In 1940, he was training to be an army mechanic and was
"kidnapped" from his course in Scotland by the Royal
Artillery and sent to Egypt, where he was captured at Wadi
Faregh as a member of the British 1st Support Group.
He was taken to Benghazi with his soldier mates where he was
supposed to be loaded on to a ship bound for Italy.
Instead, in what he described as "the worst day in my life",
he was left behind.
The ship was sunk and he lost all his mates.
As a prisoner of war in Italy he was loaded into a cattle
truck to be railed north.
On that trip, only 25 of the 50 prisoners survived.
Towards the end of the war, the Germans forced the prisoners
on a march, some dying or being killed on the way.
Mr Gaze reached the point where, despite help from fellow
prisoners, he could not continue.
They buried him in straw in a pig sty in Poland.
Later that day he was discovered by American soldiers, taken
to hospital then returned to Britain on the day war in Europe
ended.
While in the camp in Italy, Mr Gaze became close friends with
a farmer from Gore, the late Bob Weir.
After the war, Mr Gaze returned to the family business, then
in 1951 moved his family, at that stage with three children
(the fourth was born in New Zealand) to this country.
He lived in Gore, working as a bricklayer, moving to Oamaru
eight years later where he established poultry farms in
Fernbrook Rd and at Hilderthorpe.
When he retired at 65, Mr Gaze built a new family home.
He also built homes for two of his children.
The family said he was active until he had a stroke about
four years ago and he and his wife moved to Totara Lodge.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.