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Sorted by date of death
Hilda Morgan
Place of birth: Newport
Service: Nurse, VAD
Notes: A trained nurse, Hilda served at Baldwin’s Auxiliary Hospital, Griffithstown . Her name appears on the Roll of Honour of Griffithstown Ebenezer Baptist Church.rn
Reference: WaW0428
Roll of Honour
Name of Hilda Morgan on Roll of Honour, Ebenezer Baptist Church, Griffisthtown. Thanks to Gethin Matthews.
Alice A White
Place of birth: Pontardulais
Service: Teacher, Commandant, VAD, 1916/09/01 – 1919/05/10
Notes: Alice White was the head teacher of Wood Green Infants School Cardiff. She was also the Commandant of Samuel House Auxiliary Hospital in Cardiff, and received the Royal Red Cross for her service in April 1919.rnRoedd Alice White yn brifathrawes Ysgol y Babanod Wood Green, Caerdydd. Roedd hi’n Benswyddog Ysbyty Atodol Samuel House Caerdydd hefyd a derbyniodd y Groes Goch Frenhinol am ei gwasanaeth ym mis Awst 1919. rn
Reference: WaW0469
Newspaper report
Report of Alice White’s award of the Royal Red Cross. Cambria Daily Leader 7th April 1919.
Wood Street Infants
Photograph of children at Wood Street Infants School, 1925. Wood Street, also known as Temperance Town, was a densely packed area adjacent to Cardiff Station.
Caroline Emily Booker (née Lindsay)
Place of birth: Glanafon, Glamorgan
Service: Vice president, VAD, 1909-1919
Notes: Mrs Booker was widowed in 1887. She became the founder of the local Glamorgan detachment of the VAD (22) in 1909. She seems to have instigated the use of Tuscar House, Southerndown, as a Red Cross Hospital in May 1915, and most of her 7 daughters played a greater or lesser role in the running of the hospital. [qv Etta,Ellen, Mabel, Ethel and Dulcie Booker]. Mrs Booker provided a car and the petrol to ferry patients to and from the station in Bridgend 5 miles away.
Reference: WaW0470
Record of Caroline Booker
Mrs Booker’s entry in The County Families of the United Kingdom, Edward Walford (this edition c 1920)
Tuscar House
Tuscar House Red Cross Hospital, Southerndown. The house was used as a hospital in WW2 as well.
Dulcie Booker
Place of birth: Southerndown ?
Service: Nurse, Sister-in-charge, Treasurer, Financial Secretary, VAD, 1914/10/01 – 1919/04/30
Notes: Dulcie Booker managed the finances involved in setting up Tuscar House Hospital as well as its day-to-day running costs. From 1917 she also acted as Sister in Charge of the hospital. She took a main part, together with her sister Mabel [qv] in arranging entertainments for the patients, including leading the Tuscar Red Cross Hospital Band. She was a sought-after local accompanist.
Reference: WaW0475
Red Cross record card (reverse)
Reverse of Red Cross record for Dulcie Booker, showing her service at Tuscar Hospital.
Newspaper report
Report of a ‘welcome home’ reception which included a performance by the Tuscar Hospital Band. Glamorgan Gazette 19th July 1918
Newspaper report
Report of a Grand Matinée given at Bridgend Cinema by the soldiers of Tuscar House (and others). Glamorgan Gazette 29th November 1918
Newspaper report
Report of a presentation to Dulcie and Ethel Booker when Tuscar House hospital closed in April 1919. Glamorgan Gazette 4th April 1919
Ethel Anna Booker
Place of birth: Southerndown ?
Service: Nurse, Quartermaster, Commandant, VAD, 1915/04/01 – 1919/04/30
Notes: Ethel Booker began her service at Tuscar House as a voluntary kitchen-maid, but became an efficient quartermaster in August 1915. She became Commandant of the hospital following the death of her sister Nellie [qv] in 1917. Her record of service (filled out by her mother Caroline [qv]) says she lived at the hospital and took no leave for the last 18 months of her time there. Ethel and her sister Dulcie [qv] were the prime organisers of events both for fundraising and for amusing the patients at the hospital.rn
Reference: WaW0474
Red Cross record card (reverse)
Reverse of Ethel Booker’s Card, detailing her service, and written by her mother. Caroline Booker.
Tuscar House
Tuscar House Red Cross Hospital, Southerndown. The house was used as a hospital in WW2 as well.
Newspaper report
Report of a Grand Matinée given at Bridgend Cinema by the soldiers of Tuscar House (and others). Glamorgan Gazette 29th November 1918
Newspaper report
Report of a presentation to Ethel and Dulcie Booker when Tuscar House hospital closed in April 1919. Glamorgan Gazette 4th April 1919
Etta J O Booker
Place of birth: Southerndown ?
Service: Nurse, Commandant, VAD, FANY, 1909 - 1919
Notes: Etta Booker served as Commandant of the Glamorgan [22] detachment when it was founded in 1909. In November 1914, she was part of a group of six nurses from Glamorgan sent to the French Base Hospital at Saumur for 6 months. After her return to Southerndown she worked for a while in the Tuscar House hospital, but then relinquished her rank as Commandant to go to Calais with the FANY. After a breakdown of health she was moved to Nice to work in the Officers’ Hospital, then back to northern France where she worked in several hospitals, ending as a charge nurse in the Anglo Belge Hospital in Rouen in 1919. She was nearly 40 years old by this time, and had had only short breaks at home, when she worked with her sisters [Booker qv] at Tuscar House. Etta seems to have remained a member of the Red Cross, as her medals include a Silver Jubilee medal (1935) as well as French and Belgian decorations.
Reference: WaW0471
Red Cross record card (reverse)
Reverse of Etta Booker’s Red Cross card, with details of her service (presumably written by her sister Ethel [qv].
Etta Booker’s medals
Etta Booker’s medals, which were sold at Bonhams, London for £1440 in 2013. They include the Medal of Queen Elizabeth; Belgium and the France, Ministry of the Interior, silver medal
Medal card
Record of medals awarded to Etta Booker. There are two separate cards in the National Archives, this one listing her as a Trooper then Nurse in the FANY
Medal card
Record of medals awarded to Etta Booker. There are two separate cards in the National Archives, this one listing her as VAD, French Red Cross and FANY
Mabel Booker
Place of birth: Southerndown ?
Service: VAD, VAD, May 1915 – May 1917
Notes: Mabel Booker was not so involved with Tuscar House Hospital as her sisters [Etta, Nellie, Ethel and Dulcie qv], though she was ‘ready to help when required’, and clocked up 500 hours service.
Reference: WaW0473
Marion Crosland Soar
Place of birth: Kent
Service: Scientist, Chemist
Notes: Marion Soar entered University College, Bangor in 1913, and graduated BSc in 1917. She then became an assistant lecturer in chemistry at King’s College of Household and Social Science, specialising in bio-chemistry. In 1920 Marion was one of the first cohort of 20 women admitted as fellows to the Chemistry Society (along with Phyllis McKie [qv]), after a very long struggle. Women had been actively attempting admission since 1892.
Sources: Chemistry Was Their Life: Pioneer British Women Chemists 1880 – 1949. Marelene Rayner-Canham & Geoff Rayner-Canham Imperial College Press 2008
Reference: WaW0467
scientific report
Report of the formation of ferrous sulphide in eggs. Biochemical Journal April 1, 1920
Betty Morris
Place of birth: Haverfordwest
Service: Nurse, VAD, 1915/05/27 – 1918/07/12.
Notes: Betty Morris joined the VAD in May 1915, working originally in Cottesmore Auxiliary Hospital, Haverfordwest. In November she was posted to France, initially to Boulogne but was soon promoted to ‘a larger hospital’, where at 20, she was the youngest nurse. She was a fluent French speaker, and remained with the VAD until July 1918. Excerpts from some of her letters home were published in the Haverfordwest and Milford Haven Telegraph.
Reference: WaW0478
Newspaper photograph Llun papur newydd
Photograph of Betty Morris in outdoor VAD uniform. Haverfordwest and Milton Haven Telegraph 16th February 1916
Newspaper report
Newspaper report of Betty Morris’s departure to France. Haverfordwest and Milton Haven Telegraph 10th November 1915rn rn
Newspaper report
Report of Betty Morris’s Christmas in France. Haverfordwest and Milton Haven Telegraph 16th February 1916
Lily Briggs
Place of birth: Barry ?
Service: Prostitute
Notes: Lily Briggs was sentenced to twenty one days hard labour in July 1915 for ‘trying to entice young soldiers [from the camp at Nell’s Point, Barry Island] into the fields’. She also used ‘filthy language’ when arrested.
Reference: WaW0476
Newspaper report
Report of the court appearance and sentence of Lily Briggs, ‘a common prostitute’. Barry Dock News 9th July 1915.rnrn