British Red Cross

From Linking experiences of World War One
Revision as of 10:34, 2 November 2017 by GavinRobinson (talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search


British Red Cross
Years active: 4/8/1870 –
Country: United Kingdom
Service: Red Cross
Branch:
Type: Medical
Specific type: Red Cross society
Full size: None
Sources for overview: [1]
Created: 4/8/1870. 
Sources for created: [2]
Name1: British Red Cross Society
Name1 Start: 1905
Name1 End:
Reason for change:
Sources for name1: [3]
Alternate names:
Sources for alternate names:
Disbanded:
Sources for disbanded:
For more information on what infobox fields mean, see documentation at military unit, command structure and theatre of war.
Command structure
Relationship type: Affiliation
Parent unit: International Committee of the Red Cross
Parent level:
Start date:
End date:
Sources:
Command structure
Relationship type: Affiliation
Subordinate unit: Australian Branch, British Red Cross
Subordinate level:
Start date:
End date:
Sources:
Command structure
Relationship type: Affiliation
Subordinate unit: New Zealand Branch, British Red Cross
Subordinate level:
Start date:
End date:
Sources:


Personal narratives

Margaret Gray

Margaret Gray trained as a nurse in Australia. She went to England in 1914 and became a Matron with the British Red Cross Hospital at Rouen. The Australian War Memorial has her autograph book and a brief narrative of her experiences.

Related media

Official Sources

Unit war diaries

No war diaries exist for this unit. This could be because:

  • units and formations were only required to keep official war diaries when operating in a theatre of war.
  • war diaries were created but no longer survive.
  • some unit pages on this site that represent groups of formation troops don't correspond to a unit or staff department that kept war diaries.


Unit histories

Other official documents

Other sources

References

  1. Wikipedia:British Red Cross
  2. Wikipedia:British Red Cross
  3. Wikipedia:British Red Cross