Monday, 16 July 2018

Kathleen Adele Brennan and the Australian Army Nursing Service

Honouring the Nursing Sisters

Big document
Kathleen Adele Brennan, photograph from The National Archives of Australia

When I first started compiling the data for Global War Graves Leicester, I was surprised to find an Australian nursing sister buried in the Leicester cemetery. What was more intriguing was how she was buried with “full military honours”. This sparked some questions: Was this any special designation for nurses? What was their experience in the war, and what commemorations did they receive?

Of the twenty-five nursing sisters who died while serving with the Australian Army Nursing Service (AANS), all were honoured postmortem on the Australian War Memorial Commemorative Roll, standard practice for any Australian who died for the war effort. While it was unclear whether all nurses were “buried with full military honours”, this designation was awarded to a number of nurses who perished under various conditions: Nellie Spindler, a Yorkshire nurse, died by shellfire at Passchendaele; Audrey Heritage was reported to have “remained on duty when so many were stricken” before contracting disease herself; Louisa Bicknell, like Kathleen Adele Brennan and Audrey Heritage, died from illness incurred during her service. Such commemoration reflects the committed service of the nursing sisters, which is sometimes relegated to the background in narratives of the war. 

AANS: International Operations and Challenges

1934 picture of a group of Australian nurses who served in the Gallipoli campaign, photograph from the Australian War Memorial
However, similar means of commemoration for nurses and soldiers does not reveal the whole story, in particular nurses’ varied experiences. For instance, the AANS went through unique challenges that stemmed not only from their inexperience but also from new conditions brought on by the war, such as trench fever (transmitted by lice in the trenches), previously unseen wounds from new developments in artillery, and severe psychological trauma.

Additionally, the AANS--truly global in their deployment--faced challenging climatic conditions in the different geographic regions in which they operated. In Gallipoli, for instance, there were shortages of food, little protection from the cold and frequent gales. Often, there were not enough nurses; at the No. 2 Australian Stationary, there were 25 nurses for 840 patients days after the arrival of the AANS. As a member of the AANS dispatched to Gallipoli, Sister Nellie Morrice further suggested that officers deemed the AANS inexperienced and their presence unnecessary in spite of the obvious demand for medical aid. Furthermore, in India, where there was a sizable population of 320 AANS members by 1918, climate conditions proved to be near fatal as nurses treated foreign diseases in temperatures that peaked at 51 degrees Celsius.

The Australian Army Nursing Service truly had a global reach, engaged in almost every theatre of the First World War. Nursing was a challenging, sometimes fatal endeavour. Today, the sacrifices of the AANS are honoured in cemeteries all over the world; cemeteries like Leicester’s at Welford Road.

- Enshia




Sources

Butler, Janet. “Nursing Gallipoli: Identity and the Challenge of Experience.” Journal of Australian Studies, vol. 27, no. 78, 2003, pp. 47–57., doi:10.1080/14443050309387870. 
Hamilton, Robyn. “First Death of an Australian Nurse.” Queenslands World War 1 Centenary, blogs.slq.qld.gov.au/ww1/2015/06/29/first-death-of-an-australian-nurse/. 
Wadman, Ashleigh. “Nursing for the British Raj.” Australian War Memorial, 28 Oct. 2014, www.awm.gov.au/articles/blog/nursing-british-raj. 
Williams, Shirley. “World War One: The Many Battles Faced by WW1's Nurses.” BBC News, BBC, 2 Apr. 2014, www.bbc.com/news/magazine-26838077. 
Wynn, Stephen, and Tanya Wynn. Women in the Great War. Pen & Sword Military, an Imprint of Pen & Sword Books Ltd, 2017.


Monday, 16 April 2018

What we're working on: April



The only required outcome of this project, as mandated by its funder A Century of Stories, is a 20-minute conference paper at the Century of Stories conference at the University of Leicester (9 November 2018). However, from the beginning we've always been clear that we wanted to create some kind of additional output that was more durable and more accessible to the public. 

The Friends of Welford Road Cemetery have produced five self-guided themed cemetery trails over the years, and we are excited to be working with them to create a new one highlighting international connections of its First World War graves!





Monday, 9 April 2018

Research Visit to Welford Road Cemetery



A few months ago Hanna travelled from Oxford to Leicester to revisit Welford Road Cemetery- the focus of this project- to meet with the Friends of the cemetery, visit the graves we're researching in person, and get a sense of what outputs for this research would be most feasible. 

The cemetery has a designated Commonwealth War Graves Commission plot, but also has individual CWGC headstones scattered throughout the cemetery.









scattered CWGC grave

CWGC plot

CWGC Cross of Sacrifice


'Their name liveth for evermore', standard phrase used at CWGC sites- usually
on the Stone of Remembrance

grave of Samuel Paynter Musson, born in Jamaica and served
with the Indian forces

cemetery's visitor centre

The Friends of Welford Road Cemetery have a small visitor centre that handles visitor queries and stores research related to the cemetery's graves. It was great to meet with some of the Friends and hear about their work. 

Next week we'll have a post up on the outcomes of this meeting: what we decided to create as a more public-facing output for our research, and how the work on that is progressing!