Captain Tom

Captain Sir Thomas Moore is a former British Army officer and centenarian. Moore served in India, the Burma campaign during the Second World War, and later became an instructor in armoured warfare. After the war, he worked as managing director of a concrete company and was an avid motorcycle racer. On 6 April 2020, at the age of 99, he began to walk laps of his garden in aid of NHS Charities Together, with the goal of raising £1,000 by his hundredth birthday. In the 24-day course of his fundraising he became a popular household name in the United Kingdom, earning a number of accolades.

About Captain Tom in brief

Summary Captain TomCaptain Sir Thomas Moore is a former British Army officer and centenarian. Moore served in India, the Burma campaign during the Second World War, and later became an instructor in armoured warfare. After the war, he worked as managing director of a concrete company and was an avid motorcycle racer. On 6 April 2020, at the age of 99, he began to walk laps of his garden in aid of NHS Charities Together, with the goal of raising £1,000 by his hundredth birthday. In the 24-day course of his fundraising he became a popular household name in the United Kingdom, earning a number of accolades and attracting over 1. 5 million individual donations. He received the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Helen Rollason Award at the 2020 ceremony. He featured in a cover version of the song \”You’ll Never Walk Alone\” sung by Michael Ball, with proceeds going to the same charity. The single topped the UK music charts and made him the oldest person to achieve a UK number one. On 17 July 2020, he was invested as a Knight Bachelor at Windsor Castle. Moore was born in Keighley, West Riding of Yorkshire, on 30 April 1920 and grew up in the town. He was conscripted in the 8th Battalion, Duke of Wellington’s Regiment in May 1940, stationed in Cornwall, eight months after the beginning of the World War II. He did not return to the regiment, remaining as an instructor and the Technical Adjutant of the Armoured Vehicle Fighting School in Bovington Camp, Dorset, until he was demobilised in early 1946.

For 64 years, he organised the DWR’s annual reunion. He was a contestant in the Christmas Day edition of the BBC Television game show Blankety Blank. He aimed to complete 25-metre laps, ten per day, with a frame of a walking frame, branding the endeavour ‘Tom’s 100th Birthday Walk For The NHS’ The initial goal had been £1k, having been realised on 10 April 2020. By the time the campaign closed at the end of that day had increased to over £32. 79 million. His birthday was marked in a number, including flypasts by the Royal Air Force and the British Army. For over 150,000 cards, and was appointed as honorary colonel of the Army Foundation College. He is a member of the Keighleys and District Photographic Association, the number one photographer in the area between 1934 and 1936. He won several trophies, including a Scott motorcycle, winning several trophies as a Scott rider between 1934- 1936. For more information on the Keightley and District photographic association, visit www.Keighley and district photographic Association. Moore was the number 1 photographer between 1934 and 1936 as he had been his father’s father between 1934 and 1936 as had been a contestant on the BBC television game game show Blankety Blank and Blankety Blast.