A documentary following 93-year-old Paul Jarrett, an American World War I veteran, as he returns to France to visit those battlefields of long ago. As a hand-to-hand combat expert while serving in France from 1917 to 1919, Lieutenant Jarrett was wounded three times. After seventy years he wonders if he will be able to find those sites where death knocked upon his door as a young, 22-year-old lieutenant with the famous 42nd "Rainbow" Division. We follow Paul and his grandsons as they drive through France, encountering French farmers and villagers who are shocked to see this ancient warrior. The following year Paul returns once again. On this trip he is honored, as few Americans have been, when a street is named in his honor. Seven years later, Los Angeles, California: The French government bestows upon Paul its highest honor for bravery, the Legion of Honor, seventy-eight years after the Great War for bravery exhibited on May 3rd, 1918. Complete with many interviews of surviving veterans, rare archival footage, and computer graphics it is a very personal account of one of the last gentlemen of a dying era. Paul Jarrett will be remembered as the last American WWI veteran to ever return to the battle sites and trenches of France.