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- 28th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps during the Great War -


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World War 1 One ww1 wwII greatwar great 1914 1918 first battalion regiment

28th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps



   28th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps served with 9th (Scottish) Division. 9th (Scottish) Division was formed in late August 1914, part of Kitchener's First New Army. Following training in Scotland, they moved to Salisbury in late August and to Bordon in September. They proceeded to France between the 9th and 12th of May 1915 and went into action in the The Battle of Loos. In 1916 they were in action in the Battle of the Somme, including the capture of Longueval, The Battle of Delville Wood and The Battle of Le Transloy. In 1917 they fought in the The First and Second Battles of the Scarpe during the Arras Offensive, The First Battle of Passchendaele and The action of Welsh Ridge. In 1918 they fought on the Somme, in the Battles of the Lys and The Advance in Flanders, capturing the Outtersteene Ridge and seeing action in in the Battle of Courtrai and the action of Ooteghem. They were resting in billets at the Armistice. 9th (Scottish) Division was selected be part of the occupation force and on the 4th of December they crossed into Germany to take up a position at the Cologne brideghead on the Rhine. In late February 1919, the original units were demobilised, being replaced by others and The Division was renamed the Lowland Division.

11th May 1915 Motor Vehicles

15th May 1915 Concentration

15th May 1915 Report

15th May 1915 Orders

16th May 1915 Orders

17th May 1915 On the March  location map

31st May 1915 Instruction  location map

Jul 1915 Training Instruction

Jul 1915 Billets

1st Sep 1915 Instructions

1st Sep 1915 Orders

2nd Sep 1915 Orders  location map

7th Sep 1915 Observation Precautions  location map

10th Sep 1915 Instructions  location map

14th Sep 1915 Instructions

15th Sep 1915 Defence Scheme

17th Sep 1915 Reliefs  location map

21st Sep 1915 Orders  location map

9th Jul 1916 Roads Shelled

23rd Oct 1916 Bombardment  location map

24th Oct 1916 Reliefs  location map

1st Jan 1918 Reliefs  location map

2nd Jan 1918 Snow Showers  location map

3rd Jan 1918 Enemy Aircraft  location map

4th Jan 1918 Air Raid  location map

5th Jan 1918 Reliefs Complete  location map

6th Jan 1918 Air Raid  location map

7th Jan 1918 Quiet  location map

8th Jan 1918 Harassing Fire  location map

9th Jan 1918 Orders Received  location map

10th Jan 1918 Orders Issued  location map

12th Jan 1918 Shelling  location map

13th Jan 1918 Enemy Artillery  location map

14th Jan 1918 Frosty  location map

15th Jan 1918 Orders  location map

16th Jan 1918 Poor Conditions  location map

17th Jan 1918 Shelling  location map

18th Jan 1918 Attack Planned  location map

19th Jan 1918 Quiet  location map

20th Jan 1918 Orders  location map

21st Jan 1918 Shelling  location map

22nd Jan 1918 Some Shelling  location map

23rd Jan 1918 Raid  location map

24th Jan 1918 Relief  location map

25th Jan 1918 Fog  location map

26th Jan 1918 Prisoner  location map

27th Jan 1918 Orders Received

28th Jan 1918 Shelling  location map

1st Feb 1918 Foggy  location map

2nd Feb 1918 Reliefs Complete  location map

3rd Feb 1918 Cleaning up  location map

4th Feb 1918 Training  location map

5th Feb 1918 Training  location map

6th Feb 1918 Training  location map

16th Feb 1918 On the Move  location map

18th Feb 1918 Inspection  location map

19th Feb 1918 Training  location map

20th Feb 1918 Training  location map

21st Feb 1918 Training  location map

14th Mar 1918 Attack Expected  location map

3rd Apr 1918 In the Line

5th Apr 1918 Divison to be withdrawn

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Want to know more about 28th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps?


There are:5292 items tagged 28th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Great War.


Those known to have served with

28th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps

during the Great War 1914-1918.

  • Beresford MM. Charles. Pte.
  • Morris Alfred Edwin. Pte.
  • Owen E..

All names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List

Records of 28th Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps from other sources.


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260485

E. Owen 28th Field Ambulance Royal Army Medical Corps

pocketwatch

I have come across a pocket watch, inscribed to "E. Owen British Army 28th Fld. Ambulance, RAMC, ASC MT. 9th (Scottish) Infantry Division" with Ypres, Bethune, Arras, Cambrai, and Kemmel.

Geoffrey Dickson




229656

Pte. Alfred Edwin Morris 28th Field Ambulance

My father, Edwin Morris, later Archbishop of Wales, wrote this:

I was posted to the 73rd General Hospital at Trouville and given the job of telephone orderly. As I had never used the telephone before, this was an odd appointment, but I soon got the hang of it.

In the early autumn of 1918 we had a lot of fatal cases of influenza at the hospital. Big strong men would die of this within a very few days, and the doctors seemed to be at a loss how to deal with it. Somehow it seemed worse that soldiers should die of a civilian illness in a safe area than of wounds on the field of battle.

It was while I was telephone orderly at the 73rd General Hospital that rumours of a possible armistice began to circulate, and on the morning of November 11th I received the official message that at 11 a.m. the hostilities would cease. I took it to the Colonel, who could hardly believe it. He rang through to confirm it, and then authorized the release of the news to the hospital. The effect was magical. The hospital began to empty immediately. Discipline went to the winds and patients who had been confined to bed poured out and went down to the town in their hospital blue, where they were given free drinks in the estaminets. It was three or four days before we got them all back.

Geoffrey Morris






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