Women and war
Nursing in the Royal Navy
The first opportunities for women to find roles at sea
during war, without resorting to disguise, were as nurses. Formal
Healthcare for sick and injured seafarers began in the mid 18th
Century. Each ship had to have a sick bay and a surgeon. Repeated
skirmishes and campaigns had also made a network of hospital ships
necessary in the heyday of British naval power.
During Nelson’s command of the Royal Navy 1794–1805 there is
evidence of women being aboard the ships, despite it being frowned
upon by the Admiralty and no provision being made for them aboard
the vessels. Women and children are recorded as present on some of
the vessels muster books. When the fleet reached Aboukir
Bay, Egypt, during the Nile campaign 1801 many of the vessels
were converted into hospital ships, and some of the women that had
sailed with their husbands or ‘companions’ volunteered to stay with
the vessels to tend the sick and injured. They were untrained and
medical provision at the time was basic. These nurses also
acquired, or took with them, a reputation for drunkenness,
prostitution and helping their patients to desert. Despite this
reputation the admiralty recognised the value in principle of
nursing staff and allowed the women to be fed from the ships stores
and encouraged more to volunteer.
![[757] Soldiers leave for Crimea [757] Soldiers leave for Crimea](/images/%5B757%5D-Orinoco-on-way-to-Cri_tcm4-67556.jpg)
Soldiers
leave Southampton for the Crimean War |
By the time of the Crimean War (1854-56), female nurses from among
the middle classes began to be trained to assist on hospital ships.
The most famous gentlewoman to sail to the Crimea is of course
Florence Nightingale. She was made ‘Superintendent of the Female
Nurses in the Hospitals in the East’ and arrived with 38 nurses on
the eve of battle. A less well-known pioneer, Eliza Mackenzie,
brought six nurses to a naval hospital near Constantinople at the
start of the war.
The Royal Navy didn’t officially employ female nurses until 1883.
The Public Record Office notes: ‘Regulations for the Staff of
Nursing Sisters in the Royal Naval Hospitals were published in 1884
and a female nursing service was established initially at Haslar
(Portsmouth) and Plymouth. In 1897 the service was extended to
Chatham and Malta, and in 1901 to all Royal Naval Hospitals. The
names of matrons and head sisters first appear in the Navy List of
1884.’
Female nurses first went to sea on official active service in 1897
when two sisters sailed on a hospital ship as part of the Benin
Expedition, when British Soldiers were sent to Africa to quash a
rebellion. This brought the notion of female nursing to Royal
attention. In 1901, Queen Alexandra wrote to the first Lord of the
Admiralty to suggest: ‘the great wish of my heart has always been
to have the Navy Nursing Department also under my special charge,
and that it may likewise bear my name and be amalgamated with the
Army as soon as possible.’
The fact is, the Committee on Training of Medical Sick Berth and
Nursing Staff had already debated in 1899 whether there should be
an established Naval Nursing Reserve. It was decided instead that a
civilian female nursing reserve would be established, used only in
times of war. In 1902 the Queen Alexandra’s Royal Naval Nursing
Service or QARNNS was born. In the First World War (1914-1918) they
saw their first official active service, their places in hospitals
being filled by Voluntary Aid Detachments (VADs).
By the end of the First World War it was clear that a Nursing
reserve was invaluable. The scheme worked on the principle that the
QARNNS staff would work in civilian hospitals during peacetime,
being called back to military service in times of war. In 1939 at
the outbreak of World War Two the QARNNS were shipped overseas to
troopships, hospital ships and land hospitals around the world.
Often facing dangerous circumstances, women stationed in Hong Kong
were captured by Japanese soldiers. Some died, some were raped and
others spent the rest of the war suffering extremely poor
conditions in internment camps. Nurses by necessity have to be
close to the frontline and danger.
In 1977, along with the Wrens, QARNNS came under the control of the
Royal Navy with the passing of the ‘Naval Discipline Act’. Up until
this point they were still viewed as civilians attached to the
Royal Navy. In 1982, during the Falklands War, the service changed
again to allow men to serve in the QARNNS.
It has taken a long time for the QARNNS to evolve, only until
relatively recently nursing has been viewed as a civilian
occupation. Now as the Ministry of Defence recruits more nursing
professionals to the service, they remind applicants ‘QARNNS
Officers are part of the Royal Navy and you will be expected to
maintain the same standards of behaviour and appearance as any
other holder of the Queen's Commission’.
|