Background
Smout was born in Brisbane, Queensland in 1898.
Smout was born in Brisbane, Queensland in 1898.
He was Australia"s 6th last surviving World War I veteran. Smout served in the army as a stretcher bearer. He was notably one of the first on the scene upon the landing of Manfred von Richthofen, the Red Baron, after he had been shot down and was witness to his final words.
He was also the last surviving witness of Richthofen"s Death.
He joined the Australian Army Medical Corps in September of 1915 at the age of 17, giving his age as 18 years 8 months. Upon arrival in France, he was posted to the 3rd Sanitary Section of the Australian Army Medical Corps where he served as a stretcher bearer.
During an engagement near the Somme River on 21 April 1918, Smout was an eyewitness to the final moments in the life and career of the famous German flying ace Manfred von Richthofen (aka the "Red Baron"), whose aeroplane had landed nearby after he was fatally shot. Smout reported that Richthofen"s last word was "kaputt" ("finished") just before he died.
He was discharged on 8 September 1919.
A regular participant in Anzac Day marches, Smout became one of the most celebrated war veterans in Queensland as one of Australia’s last surviving World War I veteran. According to historical journalist Jonathan King, "Ted Smout"s legacy is in the hundreds of newspaper articles written about him, the book he wrote Three Centuries Spanned, hours and hours of video footage instructing Australians not to get involved in conflicts like Iraq or Afghanistan. His main message always was we should not glorify war.
lieutenant was a mistake to fight in a far flung battle that had nothing to do with Australia, and he pleaded with the nation never to do it again." He appeared in the series People"s Century discussing his recollections of the First World War in the episode "Killing Fields".
Because of his eyewitness account of Richthofen death, he also often appeared in the media. Some of his last known footage was talking in 2002 (aged about 104) for the Discovery Channel detective-documentary film about the Red Baron"s death.
He died in 2004, aged 106. At the time, he was the oldest surviving veteran of the war.