While
out at my brother's house/dog sitting I watched ANZAC Girls, great
show really liked it. It told the real life stories of 4 nurses
during World War 1 they were both Australian and New Zealand nurses
and this inspired me to do a little research about them and share a
bit about them with the rest of you. The nurses were Olive Haynes,
Alice Ross-King, Grace Wilson, Hilda Steele and Elsie Cook
Today
I am going to tell you about Grace Wilson
Grace
Margaret Wilson CBE,
RRC
was born on the 25th
June 1879 and died on the 12th
January 1957,she was a high-ranked nurse in the Australian Army
during
World War I and the first years of World War II, she was born in
Brisbane,
and completed her initial training as a nurse in 1908.
After
the outbreak of World War I she joined the Australian Army Nursing
Service(AANS) and subsequently transferred to the First
Australian Imperial Force.
From 1915 until 1919 she was the principal matron of the 3rd
Australian General Hospital.
She
served as the temporary matron-in-chief in the AIF Headquarters,
London from late 1917 until early 1918. Wilson returned to Australia
in 1920 and left the AIF to work in civilian hospitals.
She
was appointed the matron-in-chief of the AANS in 1925, and in
September 1940 joined the Second
Australian Imperial Force.
She served in the Middle East until August 1941, when she returned to
Australia due to ill health. She left the Army the next month, but
from September 1943 worked in the Department of Manpower Directorate
(Victoria)'s nursing control section.
She
attended Brisbane
Girls Grammar School,
and began her training to become a nurse at Brisbane Hospital
in
1905. She completed this qualification in 1908. During her period at
Brisbane Hospital, Wilson became the first winner of the prestigious
Gold Medal for nursing excellence.
She
subsequently travelled to London for training in midwifery
at
the Queen Charlotte's Lying in Hospital.
Wilson
subsequently worked at the National
Hospital for the Paralysed and Epileptic in
London. She arrived back in Australia during July 1914, and became
the matron of Brisbane Hospital.
Following
the outbreak of World War I, Wilson joined the Army Nursing Service
Reserve in October 1914 and became the principal matron of the 1st
Military District.She
enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force(AIF) on 15 April 1915 and
was appointed the 3rd
Australian General Hospital's
(3rd AGH) principal matron. She and the rest of the 3rd AGH departed
Sydney
bound
for Europe on 15 May 1915.
The
3rd AGH arrived in England at the end of June and was originally
intended to be deployed to France. Instead, it was decided to send
the hospital to Lemnos
island
in the Mediterranean to treat casualties of the Gallipoli
Campaign.
The 3rd AGH departed England in early July and arrived at Lemnos on 8
August. The ship carrying the nurses stopped at Alexandria during
this voyage, where Wilson learned that one of her brothers had been
killed at Quinn's
Post
in
Gallipoli.
Conditions
at Lemnos were difficult, and there were initially few facilities to
care for the many soldiers who were being evacuated there from
Gallipoli. Wilson led efforts to improve the situation, earning
praise from both her subordinates and superior officers.
In
January 1916 the 3rd AGH moved to Abbassia
in
Egypt. Wilson was mentioned in despatches
on
three occasions during the year, and was awarded the Royal Red Cross
was also offered the post of Matron in Chief at AIF Headquarters in
either late 1915 or early 1916, but turned it down as she wished to
remain with the 3rd AGH.
Wilson
was temporarily appointed the Matron in Chief at the AIF
Headquarters, London in September 1917 while Evelyn
Conyers
was
on leave in Australia. She remained in this position until April the
next year, and then rejoined the 3rd AGH.
Following
the war, Wilson was mentioned in despatches again in December 1918,
and was appointed to the Commander of the Order of the British
Empire(CBE) on 1 January 1919. The 3rd AGH was disbanded in May 1919,
and Wilson was posted to England to serve in the 3rd Australian
Auxiliary Hospital. She returned to Australia in January 1920 and
formally ceased to be a member of the AIF in April of that year.
From
November 1920 to 1922 Wilson was the matron of the Children's
Hospital
in
Melbourne.
During this appointment she sought to improve her nurses working
conditions, and secured a minimum wage for trainees. In 1922 she
resigned from the Children's Hospital and opened her own hospital in
East
Melbourne.
She
was appointed the matron-in-chief of the AANS (which was a part-time
reserve position) in 1925, and received the Florence Nightingale
Medal
four
years later.
Wilson
became the matron of The Alfred Hospital in January 1933, in this
role she oversaw the first Commonwealth scheme for training nurse
tutors. Wilson travelled again to London in 1937 to lead the AANS
contingent at the ceremonies which marked the coronation of King
George VI.
At
the outbreak of World War 11 in September 1939, Wilson was called up
to a full-time position in the Army and resigned from her position at
The Alfred Hospital.
She
served on the staff of the Director-General of Medical Services,
Major General Rupert Downes, in Army Headquarters as the Army's
matron-in-chief.
She
became a member of the Second AIF in September 1940, and served in
the Middle East as the matron-in-chief of its nursing service.
Wilson
remained in this position until May 1941, when she was forced to
return to Australia due to health problems. She arrived back in
Australia in August and left the AIF the next month.
She
was subsequently attached to the Australian Red Cross
and
oversaw an expansion of its activities. She was appointed the
executive officer of the Department of Manpower Directorate
(Victoria)'s nursing control section on 15 September 1943.
In
this role she controlled the staffing of all hospitals in the state
of Victoria and had a personal staff of four trained nurses and
eleven office workers.
She
retired following the end of World War II, but continued to work on a
voluntary basis for a number of organisations.
These
included the Royal Victorian Trained Nurses' Association, Royal
Victorian College of Nursing, Australian Red Cross Society and the
Girl Guides' Association.
She
also worked as a trustee for the Shrine of Remembrance in 1953,
Wilson became the first female life member of the Returned and
Services League of Australia.
Several
nursing organisations also awarded her their highest honours.
She
married Robert Wallace Bruce Campbell in London on 12 January 1954,
she died on the 12th
January 1957 she was subsequently accorded a funeral with full
military honours at Christ Church in South Yarra.
Wilson's
medals and uniform from World War I were placed on permanent display
at the Australian War Memorial in 2014
I love these posts! Sad that after such a life for others she got to enjoy only 3 years with her husband.
ReplyDeleteI know how sad
DeleteI plan to watch this soon! :)
ReplyDeleteWorth watching
DeleteI wonder if I can find a way to watch this here in the states. I bet I can. Sounds like it would be fascinating, especially since you're giving me the background of these women.
ReplyDeleteIt is a good show I really enjoyed it so hope you are able to find it and watch it
DeleteI love these stories about strong women.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie