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A soldier who has become the Army’s only transgender officer has said “I was living an act.”

Captain Hannah Winterbourne, 27, decided to become a woman whilst serving in Afghanistan and began her gender transition in 2013.

Hannah is in charge of over 100 soldiers as an officer in the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers and is the highest ranking trans soldier in the British Army.

She said: “I think initially it was a bit of a shock to some people, they weren’t really expecting it because it’s not something you come across every day in the Army.

“However I think people soon realised that it didn’t make a difference to my job. At the end of the day I can still do all the things I could do before I transitioned.

“That’s what the Army respects because we’re all about capability and output. That’s what matters.”

Hannah said of her decision to become a woman: “It’s about finding that courage to do it. And that’s not the easiest thing in the world.

“I was acting for everyone around me. There was no let up where I could stop that act.”

Hannah said that it was impossible to spend time on her own and be honest with herself while serving in Afghanistan.

(Image: All About Trans)

She added: “That was a nudge which eventually ended up with me coming out and changing myself and my way of life.”

Hannah, the Army’s most highly-ranked transgender soldier, revealed that the battle with her gender began when she was a young lad.

Determined to pursue a career in the Army, she enrolled at a residential college designed for students to enter the Forces.

The Army then sponsored her Electronic Engineering degree at Newcastle University, from where she went on to Sandhurst.

Hannah said: “The point where I realised I was a woman but my body was wrong was around the age of 23 at Sandhurst.

“After I was posted to Germany I decided to go to the doctors and told them. And that’s when my transition process began.”

Hannah has refused to reveal her previous male name, describing it as a ‘label’.

She is now a rep for other transgender servicemen and women and said: “Despite being perceived as a very masculine, old school, organisation the Army’s actually very forward thinking.”

Hannah was commissioned from Sandhurst in 2010 after being selected for officer training aged 15.

Despite the difficulties of coming out as transgender she said the Army had been “a fantastic employer”.

“I came out as a trans soldier about a year and a half ago when I was in Germany and since then I’ve become the highest ranking, openly serving trans soldier serving in the regular army.

“One of my additional duties is that I’m the transgender representative in the British Army, which sees me dealing with education, welfare and dealing with any issues that trans soldiers may have.

(Image: All About Trans)

“The British Army is a fantastic employer for trans soldiers. We’ve had policies since 1999 and it’s all really, really clear.”

A film featuring Hannah’s life has appeared online and is due to be broadcast by Channel Four as part of a series of short films about transgender people.