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Despite being a vital part of the war, the contribution of nurses is often overlooked. The accounts that emerge from the scrapbooks highlight the extraordinary commitment of the nursing profession, a commitment that continues in nursing today. The experience of trained nurses during the war, as opposed to the work of VADs, is little documented. By the end of the war, more than 17,000 trained nurses had served in military hospitals. Unlike VADs, some worked close to the front line, performing duties in Casualty Clearing Stations and with far greater responsibility for casualty care, wound irrigation and dressing and assisting in surgery and blood transfusions. Our project fills this gap in the historical record.

Our nurses are: Jessie AkehurstJosephine AngoisFlorence Blythe-BrownBeatrice BowmanNellie CarterHilda HandBeatrice LongmireMabel PearceBeatrice Tanner and May Wilson.

Acknowledgements

With special thanks to History of Nursing Society volunteers: Alison O'Donnell, Marion Allison, Loretta Bellman, Julie Bliss, Jill Bowman, Joan Cobern, Caroline Robertson Cowell, Jane Dean, Judith Devine, Jacky Harvey, Claire Holmes, Liz Howard Thornton, Patricia Keegan Poels, Jacinta King, Jayne Knill, Claire Laurent, Lesley Mcfarlane, Helen Patrick, Sally Pentecost, Catherine Regan, Viv Sewell, Suzanne Shouesmith, Kathy Sturley, Alison Spires, Caroline Waller, Cynthia Wenden, Kate Whatman, Dianne Yarwood and Susan Yasee.

Service Scrapbooks: Nursing and Storytelling in the First World War focuses on the First World War stories of nine nurses and one VAD (Voluntary Aid Detachment). Each one of them left behind a scrapbook detailing their experiences in the Great War. With Heritage Lottery Funding, the ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥ (RCN) has been able to digitise these documents and research the remarkable women who made them, tracing their wartime stories.