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Information
The Red Cross & St John's Ambulance Voluntary Aid Detachments provided a first aid and ambulance service, on the Home Front they worked alongside other civil defence organisations such as the Air Raid Wardens and Auxiliary Fire Service in helping those affected by air raids. Members also worked overseas alongside the military medicals services, transporting the wounded and caring for them. They also provided a service to send provisions and comforts to prisoners of war and as they had done during the Great War, provided staff for convalencent homes to take care of wounded and sick soldiers, sailors and airmen. The Red Cross Wounded, Missing and Relatives Department again offered help to the relatives of the wounded and missing with their tracing service, gathering information on the fate and whereabouts of loved ones who had been reported wounded or missing in battle. The detchments were organised by county.
This list is under construction.
- Kent Voluntary Aid Detachment
List of those who served with the Red Cross & St John's Ambulance Voluntary Aid Detachments during the Second World War.
- VAD. Margaret Mary Botsford. Read their Story.
- VAD Dental Nurse Jillian "Nightie" Nightingale. Read their Story.
Records of the VAD from other sources.
If you have any names to add to this list, or any recollections or photos of those listed, please get in touch.
VAD. Margaret Mary Botsford HMS Collingwood (Shore Base)
Every morning at six o'clock the American Forces Network was switched on in the wards to familiar music from Elgar. The day staff came on duty at half past seven and although we had been aware that an invasion was imminent to us it was an ordinary morning. On 6th June 1944 I was twenty years old, serving as a full-time VAD nurse at a large naval camp HMS Collingwood just outside Fareham near Portsmouth. In the previous weeks in May all leave had been cancelled, we were not allowed more than five miles beyond the camp and the roads around were crammed with army vehicles and personnel. Eisenhower's headquarters were on the hill beyond the town and large staff cars with American flags were to be seen.
On the particular morning our routine was similar to any other but half way through the morning it was announced on the radio that troops had arrived in France and the long-awaited invasion had taken place. At about twelve o'clock I was told to report to the Superintending Sister's office where twelve of us were to be sent to the base hospital at Haslar to help with casualties. On arrival we were sent to bed in preparation for night-duty. This started at seven thirty in the evening and we were directed to empty wards which needed preparation. Out of the window we could see the channel but as it grew darker nothing happened and the night passed.
The following evening we were told to be ready as the operating theatres were full. The lift doors clanged incessantly during the night, all beds soon became occupied and we had little time to ourselves until going off duty, later than usual, the following morning. The patients were glider pilots, airborne troops and infantrymen and there were amputations, head and eye wounds most needing constant attention though glad to be safe. Some were anxious to talk and one boy attempted to write a letter with his left hand (the one he had left). After a few days evacuation to hospitals in less dangerous areas started along with a stream of relatives who were told they had further journeys to make. Many heartbreaking sights, tears and efforts to cope with the unknown. After a week we were sent back to camp. Sixty years later it is still fresh in my memory.
30/5/04
P/JX W502416 V.A.D Botsford M.M.
Andrew Stewart
VAD Dental Nurse Jillian "Nightie" Nightingale Voluntary Aid Detachment
Jillian Allen was a VAD, working as a Dental Nurse in the Royal Navy, at Haslar and later at Newton Abbott, Devon. She was de-mobbed from the Royal Navy Hospital Stonehouse, Plymouth, Devon, at the end of the war. She worked with a number of dental surgeons to many of whom she was known informally) as Nightie. Prior to her call-up, she was working for the Midland Bank in Exeter, and then Exmouth.
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The free section of the Wartime Memories Project website is run by volunteers. We have been helping people find out more about their relatives wartime experiences since 1999 by recording and preserving recollections, documents, photographs and small items.
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