Guernsey Press

England’s oldest man tells the Queen not to send a card as he turns 111

Bob Weighton said he didn’t see why the state should have to pay to send him a birthday greeting.

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England’s oldest man Bob Weighton has put his longevity down to being one of “life’s survivors”.

The former teacher and engineer is celebrating his 111th birthday today with his many friends at his retirement flat in Alton, Hampshire.

“I quite like meeting people I have never seen before, that’s one of my delights. I like meeting people who have been places and have some understanding of what it means to be human.”

Mre Weighton with his special plate
Mr Weighton had a special numberplate made for his walker (Steve Parson/PA)

“I thought that’s enough, but I might consider another one next year if I live that long.”

When asked for the secret of his longevity, he joked: “By avoiding dying – there’s no reason otherwise. I have had the usual scares, flu, influenza, malaria, two or three operations; I ought to be dead but I am a survivor, if you like.”

Mr Weighton, who had two sons and a daughter, 10 grandchildren and 25 great-grandchildren, said the world had changed “enormously” in his lifetime but people had mostly stayed the same.

He said: “Visually and in physical terms, it’s changed enormously, in what human beings are – not at all.

“The basic concerns of human beings of meeting and interacting with other human beings is exactly the same – ‘can this person be trusted?’”

Mr Weighton as a child
Mr Weighton as a child (Family handout/PA)

He said the speed of communication was the other big change and he will be holding a Skype conversation on his birthday with a school in Taiwan where he taught in the 1930s.

But Mr Weighton said he was not tempted to get a mobile phone because he could just as easily phone someone else to ask them to look anything up for him.

Describing himself as an “international person”, Mr Weighton said he kept up to date with world news by reading The Economist which avoids the “tittle and tattle and gossip”.

While teaching in 1934
While teaching in 1934 (Family handout/PA)

Mr Weighton, a retired engineer, still has a workshop in his flat where he makes windmills and ornaments from recycled wood.

And he still shops and cooks for himself and regularly goes to the local supermarket using his walking aid, for which he has had a new number plate – Bob 111 – created to mark his birthday.

Mr Weighton addedd: “It causes a lot of amusement and it’s a talking point. A lot of people looking glum when they see that, they begin to smile.”

“Promoting human interaction is the motive of my life.”

Mr Weighton shares his birthday and age with the UK’s other oldest man Alfred Smith, from the village of St Madoes in Perthshire.

Mr Smith was born in Invergowrie in 1908, the fifth of six sons of John and Jessie Smith.

He was educated at Invergowrie Primary School and Harris Academy, Dundee.

He emigrated to Canada, along with four of his brothers, in 1927 but returned after five years and went on to drive lorries for his brother George.

Britain’s oldest men
Alfred Smith pictured at his home in St Madoes, Perthshire on his 110th birthday last year (Andrew O’Brien/Church of Scotland/PA)

Mrs Smith died more than 15 years ago, aged 97 while his son Allan, who worked with his father on the farm for 40 years, died in 2016.

Mr Smith retired at the age of 70 but continued to go to the farm until well into his 80s.

Asked for his secret to a long and happy life in a previous interview the former farmer said: “Porridge is helpful and having a job you enjoy.

“I like to think I’ve lived a decent life. I do ask myself – why me? Why have I lived so long when others haven’t?”

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