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Early letters
- 1914 and 1915
In April 2009 Piers
Stainforth (great nephew of Edie) was rummaging through family archives
and found three early letters from Edie to her mother. These
three, which were all in one envelope, are a
wonderful addition to the diaries and fill some of the gap between the
time that she first set off for Belgium and France in October 1914 and
Volume 1 of the diaries.
The envelope - Piers
notes:
"I found three
letters in an envelope among papers left by my father.
The envelope
is informed in a hand unknown to me, "Letters from the front. Edith
Appleton". Too bad it contained only three! Two of the letters are
typed transcriptions which were, I suppose, done some time after the
event.
"One of the two
transcriptions (11.10.1914) is a carbon copy, includes a title
page and is pinned together by a neat brass tack at the corner.
"The other
(9.12.1914) appears to be an original typescript, including a couple
of postscripts, at least one of which was apparently added later as
the quality of the ribbon and the alignment of the text differs
significantly from the rest of the text. All of the work we've seen
from Edie was hand written and I think it unlikely that she had
access to a typewriter usually — though this letter is from a
"Stationary Hospital" which may have included such things — or that
she would seek one out instead of writing by hand as usual. Anyway,
want of access to typewriters and Edie's more typical use of pens to
write and draw, and the concern she expressed in a diary when a pen
was lost, suggest to me that these typescripts were done some time
later, perhaps at the time that someone began to transcribe the
diaries (Volumes
2-4 remained as handwritten by Edie)
by typewriter."
1. 11 October 1914
The letter, which is typed with a covering page entitled 'A LETTER FROM
FOREIGN WATERS. Written by Edith E. Appleton', details the journey she
made by ship from Southampton via various other ports (Dungeness, Dover,
Ostende and Dunkirk) and ending in Boulogne.
Click here to read this letter
as a PDF file or on the following links to read scanned copies
of the individual pages:
2. 9 December 1914
This letter is sent from No 10 Stationary Hospital which was based at St
Omer from October 1914 until May 1918. The letter starts by saying that
a recent letter from Edie's mother had taken longer to arrive as it had
been addressed to her at No. 14 Stationary Hospital which records show (http://www.1914-1918.net/hospitals.htm)
was based at Wimereux between October 1914 and April 1919. This suggests
that Edie had recently moved from No. 14 to No. 10 General Hospital so,
together with the information in the first letter above, this all makes
her
service record details look a bit minimal.
For family members (see
the family tree here), one of the delights of this letter is its
mention of several of Edie's relatives and a close friend:
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Amy was
married to Edie's older brother, Edward (Ted), and Olive and
Dorothy, who were aged 14 and 6 respectively, were their
daughters. Amy is also mentioned on 10 June 1916 in
Volume 3 of the diaries.
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Fred and
Bud (Walter) were two more of Edie's brothers.
-
Also mentioned
was Hilda (Gibb) - a close friend of Edie's about whom she
writes several times in the diaries. On 11 June 1916 (in
Volume 3 of the diaries), for example, Edie writes of her friend: "Many
happy returns to Hilda! dear me she is 36 - & not married yet!".
Since Edie had turned 37 just two days earlier and was herself
unmarried, one can imagine her smiling as she wrote that.
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Here is
a picture, dated 1910
so taken just 4 years before Edie's letter,
of Amy Adelaide Victoria Appleton (née
White) and her three children,
Olive (10),
Dorothy (2)
and their brother Edward Rowland (8).
If the
photos was taken in 1910 those ages should be about right
although I would say the children all look a bit older.
Many thanks to the family of Dorothy for the photo.
Click on
the photo to enlarge. |
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...and here is a
photo of Dorothy West (née
Appleton), who
celebrated her 101st birthday in January 2009. This photo
was taken in early May 2009 when I visited Dorothy at
Westall House, Horsted Keynes.
Sadly, Dorothy died on 12
September 2009. Since I first made contact with her in
1996 she has been a wonderful source of stories and
information about the Appleton family in the first half of
the 20th century. Thank you, Dorothy.
Dick Robinson
Click on
the photo to enlarge. |
Click here to read this
second letter as a PDF file or on the following links to read
scanned copies of the individual pages:
3. 23 February 1915
By this time Edie was at No 3 Casualty Clearing Station. This CCS,
the records
show, began at Hazebrouck in August 1914, moved to
Poperinghe in April 1915 and, a month later under fire, moved to
Bailleul. This move is dramatically described in
Volume 1
of Edie's diaries.
Click here to read the third letter
as a PDF file or here to
read a scanned copy of the original.
So......where exactly
was Edie - and when - in 1914 and 1915?
Taking together all the references to locations in these letters and
some in the later diaries, it seems that we need to revise or, at least,
expand the sketchy information in Edie’s service record. Here it is:
Click
on image to enlarge page 1
Click
on image to enlarge page 2
The
Service Record shows no date of joining up and the note 'To 3
CCS' is undated. The first date mentioned is 20 November 1915 to No. 1 General
Hospital but, with the help of the new information in these letters as
well as information received from Sue Light (expert on the role of
nurses in WW1 - see
(http://scarletfinders.co.uk/),
we can state the following:
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She
signed her initial contract with ‘His Majesty’s Principal Secretary
of State for the War Department’ on 27 August 1914.
-
She joined at Fort Pitt, Chatham on 16 September 1914 and her total
period of service was from 15 September 1914 to demobilisation on 22
December 1919.
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On Friday 9 October 1914, we
now learn from the first letter,
Edie left Southampton and travelled, via Dungeness and Dover,
arriving at Ostende at 3am on Sunday 10 October 1914. After a
day or two in Ostende she sailed, she thought bound for Dover, but
after anchoring off Dunkirk she arrived in Boulogne where, it seems,
she stayed.
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On 9 December 1914 she wrote
from No 10 Stationary Hospital which, records show
(http://www.1914-1918.net/hospitals.htm),
was at St Omer from October 1914. This letter mentions a
College (with a Chapel attached), which may have been the base for
No 10 Stationary. She also writes of the "Garrison Church" there.
This letter also refers to a letter from her mother having been
redirected from No. 14 Stationary Hospital with the implication that
Edie had worked there prior to No. 10. Records show (see
http://www.1914-1918.net/hospitals.htm) that No 14 was at
Wimereux between October
1914 and June 1919.
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The third
letter (23 February 1915) is from No 3 CCS (Casualty Clearing
Station) which, according to recorded
history, was at Hazebrouck at that time. However,
Edie
not only refers back to St Omer (presumably a reference to
her time at No. 10 Stationary Hospital)
but also back to
Hazebrouck.
-
As mentioned
above, No. 3 CCS was forced to move under fire in late April 1915 and the
run up to this
and subsequent moves are told day by day in
Edie's diary, Volume 1. It is
also interesting to read another perspective on these events - that
of Miss Maud McCarthy,
Matron-in-Chief with the British
Expeditionary Force in France and Flanders.
Her diaries for April 1915 can be seen here:
http://scarletfinders.co.uk/33.html. Start with her entry for 27
April.
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