Thursday 6 July 2023

Researching Women of the Voluntary Aid Detachment in WW1

 

 

 


© IWM Q 18943
Members of the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) with their mascot at the Royal Naval Hospital, Granton.
 

The following blog gives a brief introduction on how to research a woman who was known to be a VAD. It is also worth a quick check even if it is not known whether a woman who is being researched  was a VAD – if she was an adult during the Great War she may have either volunteered, or was paid employee. I have found dozens of women simply on a hunch!

On 16 August 1909 the War Office issued the ‘Scheme for the Organisation of Voluntary Aid in England And Wales’, followed by a similar scheme in Scotland in December, to provide clearing hospitals, stationary hospitals and ambulance trains for the Territorial Force. By early 1914 1,757 female and 519 male detachments had been registered with the War Office.  Members of the Unit were quickly referred to as “VADs”.

There is a popular misconception that all VADs were nurses or nursing assistants on wards in hospitals. This ignores the dozens of other roles that VADs took during the War, which included organising working parties, transport duties, canteen workers in auxiliary hospitals.clerks, drivers, dispensers of medicines, commandants, cooks, storekeepers and more. I have even seen the roles of “egg collector” and “sphagnum moss” collector noted on record cards! The moss was used in the making of bandages. Some VADs took specialist classes to become a masseuse or use an x-ray machine. One famous example is Agatha Christie, who worked as a dispenser of medicines during the war (and possibly made use of  her knowledge of poisons in her novels!)

A dramatic expansion in the size of the force followed and by 1916 there were about 80,000 VAD members with 12,000 nurses working in military hospitals at home and overseas, with a further 60,000 unpaid volunteers working as nurses.

© IWM Q 2472      
A VAD nurse keeping records in a British Red Cross Society, Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) 
Dressing Station at Abbeville, 27th June 1917.

There are many resources to help in researching the life story of a VAD,  a good starting point are  the British Red Cross records. https://vad.redcross.org.uk/volunteering-during-the-first-world-war

These records were recently updated and I am sad to say, it was not an improvement! In fact, searching them is now far more difficult (principally because each search throws up 100 items of ever irrelevant names!). Therefore, the more unusual the name the better- it will be first name on the list!   However, once the woman’s record card has been found, it can give a lot of details – including their address on joining, the years they worked, salary (if applicable – many were middle class women who did not take a salary), awards etc. There are often other details for example if a member had married, her change of name noted, or if she had died while on duty. From this information the member can be traced both back in time- through census records etc and forward – for example many women did go on to have careers in nursing, or continued their career and could be found in nursing registers on Ancestry. The 1921 census and the 1939 register can also be looked at to map out how their future might have gone. Find my Past has copies of 1000s of newspapers over many decades and a quick search of a name can give even more information – I have found marriages, photographs, obituaries and other really interesting information to help build up a picture of women’s lives.  Lives of the First World War- a joint project with Find My Past and the Imperial War Museum is free to view and women who were VADs can very often be found on a search - -with added information.

 

 

Madeleine Elsie Bates. 
This lady was a VAD who  lived in my home town of Shenfield in Essex. 
She was on leave at home, suffering from 'shell shock' and a stray bomb fell on her home, killing her
 Imperial War Museum ID: 6181472
 

Another resource that is particularly useful for professional nurses is the Royal College of Nursing's journal which has been digitised  for the years 1888 - 1956. It is free and searchable  Very useful, especially if you have a nurse who might have received an award or who died on duty. Or you could search for a named hospital, place or other phrase. I sometimes just browse it!  (Sad that I am!)

 ttps://rcnarchive.rcn.org.uk

I hope that this brief blog can help researchers to identify and remember many of the “forgotten women” of the War years; it is only in the recent past that women’s contributions, courage and lives have begun to be valued. They should be remembered every Armistice Day along with servicemen.

 “Lest We Forget”!

 

  (All of the subscription accounts mentioned can be consulted for free in many large or local libraries.)

https://vad.redcross.org.uk/volunteering-during-the-first-world-war

https://www.militaria-history.co.uk/articles/the-voluntary-aid-detachment/

https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/

My Facebook Page Remembering Women in the UK in WW1 has a LOT of information, stories, photos and biographies- mostly of “ordinary” women!

https://www.facebook.com/groups/1468972083412699

Ancestry.co.uk

Find My Past

British Newspaper Archives (these can also be found on Find my Past)

Lives of the First World War

 

Sunday 30 April 2023

It's a Family Affair: Three Weddings and a .........................Christmas!

We have photos of three family weddings and I'm pleased to say that I know a LOT about the people who were married and those that attended. The first of these occasions was my husband's great aunt Lilian May (Lillie) Rich who married Thonmas Percy in 1923. The photo is absolutely delightful and, because I have spent two years poring over 100s of items, I can identify most of the guests, and what happened to them in later years.

Lillian Rich and Thomas Percy
 
Lilian was born in Bootle Liverpool in 1900. She was one of 8 children, but by the time of her marriage, only 3 others were living - her three other sisters - who were Sarah, Doris and their much younger sister, Grace (more of her later!) Lilian had worked as a shop assistant in Bootle prior to her marriage. Her family were very close, as evidenced in many, many photos of them all together.




Lillie as a young girl




A family outing before the Great War. Lillie,with her three sisters has her hands resting on her father's
shoulders. The girl on the left is her youngest sister
Catherine Grace, who lived to be 112 (another story!)
I believe her brother Tom is seated right. He died at Gallipoli.


Lillie and Tom married in West Derby in 1923. The family were from a very working class background (her father Henry was a shipwright working at the docks in Liverpool) as was both Tom and his father. The photograph shows quite a smart wedding - and the family were all there in their best, and very smart, clothes (and hats, lots of hats!).



Lillie and Tom's wedding, 1923.
Behind Tom is his new brother in law, Joe who is holding his son, Edgar
Next to Joe is Lillie's sister, Sarah, my husband's grandmother.
Lillie's father Henry is the elderly man on the right at the back
Her younger sister, Grace sits next to Tom
Her other sister Doris, is somewhere, under one of those splendid hats!
Tom had two brothers and a sister but he 
seems to have been estranged from them, 
although they may be in the photo.

Lillie and Tom were married for 36 years, before Tom died in 1959. Lillie died only 4 years later. They had a son, Len, who is still alive (in 2023). 





Grace Rich and Leonard Jones

I have blogged extensively about Grace, who was the youngest in the Rich family. She was born in 1906 and her mother died just 4 years later. Grace was effectively brought up by her eldest sister, Sarah, who looked after four sisters and her brother when her mother died. Grace was always very well dressed. I have dozens of photos of her and she always looks immaculate and indeed very fashionable! She owned or worked in a millinery shop before her marriage (we are not sure which). It was in Cherry Avenue in Liverpool. 




Grace and Leonard were married in 1933. The only photo I have is of the two of them together on their wedding day.



Grace and Len. They were married for 53 years when
Len died in 1986. Remarkably, Grace lived another 33 years!
She died aged 112 in 2019. being the oldest person in the UK at that time.
I have written a blog about her separately. 
 
Audrey Smith and Rex Gellion
 
Sarah and Joe had two children, Edgar and Audrey. Audrey was my husband's mother. The family lived in Bootle and were bombed out in the Liverpool Blitz in 1941 

Joe, who was a keen photographer took pictures of the bombed house!



Joe and Audrey, before the house was bombed

We have the most wonderful photo of the wedding of Audrey and Rex in 1949


The marriage, at All Saints Church, Childwall.
It's difficult to point everyone out! But Audrey's parents and aunts
are definitely there, as well as a young cousin.

Audrey and Rex had two sons and were happily married for 35 years  until his untimely death in 1984.
 
Three very stylish weddings and all three were very happy. The families remained close for many, many years after their weddings.This lovely photo from maybe the 1950s? shows our family altogether at Christmas. I love the food and drink that takes us back to those less excessive days!


Around the table we have Lillie, Sarah and Doris, Doris's husband Sam,
together with Sarah and Joe's two children 
(Audrey and Edgar with Edgar's daughter, and Rex)
A wonderful family photo!