Mr Bates vs The Post Office viewers were left in tears after watching the final episode of the ITV drama on Thursday.
The series follows the true story of hundreds of subpostmasters wrongly prosecuted for theft by the Post Office due to a faulty IT system.
And in the final episode of the series, viewers saw Alan take his case all the way to the Royal Courts of Justice.
He went to the courts to take on the Post Office with a Group Litigation Order covering 555 claimants.
Fans were emotional after watching, with one saying on X: ‘Not me crying at seeing the convictions of the subpostmasters getting their convictions over turned. It’s terrible how they were treated and I really hope they all get back every penny they rightfully deserve and is THIERS!’
Mr Bates vs The Post Office viewers were left in tears after watching the final episode of the ITV drama on Thursday
Another wrote: ‘I don’t think a show has ever made my blood boil like #MrBatesVsThePostOffice.
‘A magnificently crafted, brilliantly acted piece of television, illustrating the heartbreaking and tragic consequences of this disgraceful, ongoing national scandal. A must-watch.’
Toby Jones who leads the cast as the former subpostmaster has revealed that Mr Bates shunned him – because he didn’t think he was worthy of being depicted as a hero.
‘Alan is quite an extraordinary man who presents as one of the most ordinary people you can meet’, the actor, 57, said in an interview with BAFTA .
‘So when you come to play someone like that, I needed to find out who he was, what made him do this extraordinary thing and unite hundreds of, a thousand people, in one place and take on the might of the corporate post office.
‘And that was a great shock because he felt that he himself wasn’t worthy of being heroic because there was nothing unusual about him.
In the final episode of the series, viewers saw Alan take his case all the way to the Royal Courts of Justice
Fans were emotional after watching, with one saying on X: ‘Not me crying at seeing the convictions of the subpostmasters getting their convictions over turned.’
‘He wasn’t a great source of material, he was very friendly and warm, but he said, “I’m just not a very emotional guy”.
‘So, I went to chat to other people who knew him, and they said, Alan Bates is one of the smartest and inspirational people they’d ever met.
‘There is a paradox about him.
‘All of my dealings with him have been great. They haven’t helped me play him very much, but they’ve been great.’
Mr Bates was one of hundreds of innocent subpostmasters working in the UK who was accused and later charged of theft, fraud and false accounting due to a faulty IT system.
The scandal is considered the most widespread miscarriage of justice in British history, leading to the inquiry into what went wrong, and who was responsible.
Toby Jones who leads the cast as the former subpostmaster has revealed that Mr Bates shunned him
Saying he didn’t think he was worthy of being depicted as a hero (pictured with partner Suzanne Sercombe)
Between 2000 and 2014, an average of one Post Office worker a week was prosecuted, for theft, false accounting and other offences, by the Post Office.
From a total of 736, many were jailed, bankrupted and suffered appalling stress and public shame.
For years Royal Mail and its computer partner Horizon – a system developed by the Japanese company Fujitsu – insisted that they were isolated cases.
The four-part series has received a mountain of praise since airing its first episode on New Year’s Day.