Last surviving fireman from the 1940 Sheffield Blitz dies aged 99
The great-great-grandfather was one of the brave firefighters who risked their lives to stop raging infernos as the Luftwaffe dropped bombs across the the city between December 12 and December 15 in 1940.
The raids left 693 people dead, 3000 homes destroyed and a tenth of the population homeless.
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Hide AdDoug was just 21 when the war broke out and was one of only 68 fully trained firemen in the city.
He was hailed a hero for putting out a raging fire on the roof of the Town Hall - which he later learned housed a secret communications base.
His granddaughter Julie Shaw, aged 50, of Stannington, said: "He talked about the Blitz quite a lot and one incident that stuck out for him was when he put the Town Hall fire out.
"Afterwards he was told that this was the nerve centre for communications in the region. They had kept it secret so the enemy didn't know about this.
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Hide Ad"Afterwards a police inspector took him down to the basement and he was surprised at how many people were working down there. The policeman said 'this is the man that saved the building' and everyone cheered and clapped. He never forgot that."
At his 96th birthday celebrations Doug said: "I still remember that first night of the Blitz, the noise of the bombs was deafening.
"I was scared most of the time and there was the constant misery of being wet through, the heat scorching you and the pain of cut hands from broken glass everywhere coupled with constant hunger and thirst."
He joined the RAF as a flight engineer in 1942 and was part of the squadron that led bombing raids over Germany.
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Hide AdHe returned to fire brigade after the war and was based mostly at the former city centre station in Division Street for about 20 years.
Doug also worked as an insurance salesman, bar and restaurant manager and had his own business selling sectional garages. In later life he made bird nesting boxes and donated them to schools and nursing homes.
Julie said: "He was well-known in Sheffield and was a real character. He was always smiling, laughing and joking."
Born in Balby, Doncaster, on January 1 1918, he later moved to Sheffield and settled in Woodhouse.
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Hide AdHe married his first wife, Muriel, during the war and the couple had three children – Richard, Margaret and Douglas – before they divorced some years later. He was later in a relationship with his partner Marjorie for more than 30 years until her death in 2003. He also had six grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren.
Doug died on Friday, May 5, at Sheffield's Northern General Hospital after a short illness. The funeral will take place at Grenoside Crematorium on a date yet to be fixed. South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue will provide a guard of honour at the service.