Henry Tandey, the most decorated private soldier during the First World War, is to be permanently remembered in his home town of Leamington.
Providing planning permission is granted, a blue plaque will be installed outside the Angel Hotel in Regent Street, which backs on to the former Swains Buildings.
This was where Henry Tandey was born in 1891 and where he attended the local St Peter’s School.
Although Mr Tandey, who died in 1967, was made a Freeman of the Royal Borough of Leamington after the war, there has never been anything to mark on his birthplace because it had been demolished.
Members of Leamington town council’s planning committee were expected to support their own application for the plaque last night (Thursday August 25) - and pass it on to Warwick District Council for consideration in a few weeks’ time.
Town clerk Robert Nash said: “During the First World War Mr Tandey had the unique distinction of winning the Victoria Cross, the Distinguished Conduct Medal and the Military Medal.
“He was also mentioned in despatches on several occasions for his bravery.”
More controversially, the former Green Howard soldier is credited with not shooting a wounded German Lance Corporal - who turned out to be Adolf Hitler - in 1914.
Whether this was true, or Hitler simply battoned on to an English war hero when he met Neville Chamberlain in 1938, is open to dispute.
Certainly Hitler is said to have been saved by a British ‘Tommy” and had a picture of Tandy on his wall when Chamberlain visited him during the Munich crisis.
News of the likely plaque has pleased Stratford academic Dave Johnson who is writing a book about Henry Tandey, and is looking for more memories of his early life in the town. He knows that Henry married twice, first to Edith Warwick and, following her death, to Annie Whateley.
