Britain’s oldest person Joan Hocquard dies aged 112 

Britain’s oldest person who drove an ambulance during WWII and refused a card from the Queen because she didn’t want everyone to know hold old she was dies aged 112

  • Joan Hocquard was born in 1908 during reign of Queen Victoria’s son Edward VII
  • She drove ambulances in London during WW2 before meeting husband Gilbert
  • After his death in 1981 she met widower Kenneth Bedford and lived happily together for another 30 years
  • The oldest living Brit is now Lilian Priest, from Swanage, Dorset, at 111 years old

The family of Britain’s oldest person have today paid tribute to her following her death aged 112. 

Joan Hocquard, who was born during the reign of the queen’s great-grandfather Edward VII in 1908, passed away yesterday at a care home in Poole, Dorset.

Her nephew Paul Reynolds, 74, said Joan believed there was no secret to a long life and enjoyed ‘lashings of butter and cream and she scoffed at idea of dieting’.

Mr Reynolds a former BBC journalist, said: ‘Joan Hocquard was a remarkably resilient person and lived her long life taking everything in her stride.

‘She was born into a well-off family which had a law firm in the City of London.

‘Her father was in the Colonial Service and Joan spent some of her childhood in Kisumu in Kenya where he was in charge of shipping on the Great Lakes before and during the First World War.

The family of Britain’s oldest person Joan Hocquard have today paid tribute to her following her death aged 112

‘There was no secret to her long life.

‘Indeed, she broke most of the modern dietary rules with relish.

‘She worked in a French hotel near Geneva for some years in the 1930s and learned how to cook the French way which for her was the only way – lashings of butter and cream which she loved until her final days.

‘She was tremendously hospitable and loved cooking for guests and taking them out to restaurants. If you stayed overnight with her, she wanted you to stay for two nights and if for two then a week.

‘She became an ambulance driver in London at the start of the war but gave this up when she got married and moved to the south coast near Eastbourne.

‘She persuaded the coastguards to let her use the beach near Beachy Head on condition she was away before soldiers, who swum with no clothes on, arrived at four o’clock.

Her nephew Paul Reynolds, 74, a former BBC journalist, said: 'Joan Hocquard was a remarkably resilient person and lived her long life taking everything in her stride'

Her nephew Paul Reynolds, 74, a former BBC journalist, said: ‘Joan Hocquard was a remarkably resilient person and lived her long life taking everything in her stride’

‘She served US servicemen tea and cakes at a nearby camp and was surprised one day when a GI gave her a five-pound note for a 5 penny cup of tea.

‘She and her husband had 40 foot yacht which they sailed from Beaulieu in Hampshire around the coast and to France.

‘They also travelled across the continent in a camper van. She loved being on the move.

‘In later years after her husband died she met a widower Kenneth Bedford and they lived together happily for 30 years.’

The oldest living Briton is now believed to be Lilian Priest, from Swanage, Dorset, who is 111 years old.