Diary of Wilfrid Wanostrocht Giblin, 1914 - 1915 - Part 3 (2024)

Returned to Alexandria by afternoon train

Jun 21st The 2nd General Hosp. left Alexandria

for Mena House Hospital

Jan 23 Visited Indian Hospital Ship

with many returning sick & wounded

Indians mostly wounded in Left Hand.

Equipment of 1st ACH loaded on train

Jan 24th Entrained at 9am & left for

Cairo with 1st General Hospital.

Reached Kutteh Station about 1pm. Headed

over to Heliopolis then allotted room in

basem*nt. Officers very fine rooms on

ground floor. Meals at Hotel opposite.

Jan 25. Equipment transported to Heliopolis.

No losses in transit. Which is more than

most units can say. Called on General

Fwd. Director of Medical Services for Army

in Egypt. Received instructions about

using Motor Ambulances in Cairo

to assist removal of sick Indians.

Jan 26 Received instructions to hold self

in readiness to move forward at short

notice. Answered I could be ready to

move in 3½ hours. Later received order

that whole unit with 21 nurses from

1st A. General Hospital was to entrain

next day at 3pm.

Matters in Heliopolis Hospital becoming

very uncomfortable owing to behaviour of

Lt Col. Ramsay Smith who behaves in a most

*Sister ship to Triumph which was

sunk at Gallipoli. Both built for

Peruvian Govt & Japan over at time

of Russo. Japanese war.

peculiar manner towards his officers.

This is more remarkable as he has some

of the finest men on his staff, Syme,

Maudaby, Jackson, Dunhill, Turnbull &

Sutherland. They are all thoroughly disgusted.

Of his nurses us the majority

immediately volunteered to come with the

Clearing Hospital but none were informed

who was to go till about 8.30 next morning

All luggage had to be packed by 9.30

Left Arranged for rapid repairs of motor

wagons.

Jan 27th Left Palais Kutteh Station at

3.30. At Cairo picked up ½ 1st Stationary

Hospital with 10 nurses. including Janet

Nurse King & Fred Birds nurses. Major

Powell in command with Newland &

Force. Poor Corbyn left who will be

mad I know esp as I have taken

away his favorite nurses. Reached

Ishmailia 10.30. There received news

of some fighting that day on the Canal

Left the ½ Stationary Hospital & went on

to Port Said Passed the H.M.S. Swiftsure *

Battleship in canal. She had been firing

that morning & was cleared for action.

Reached Port Said at 12.20 met by Major

Batty I.M.S. & Captain Heron. Informed

that I was to take charge of a Hospital there

a convent the "Asile Convent" having

been requisition that morning for the

purpose. Sent nurses to the Hospital. Then

unloading equipment, 50 tons & 6 motors,

bivouacked men on station & officers went

to Hotel bed by 3.30.

Jan 28th By 7 o'clock made start to move

equipment from station to Hospital. Transport

by mule cart (Indian) & my motor lorry

Much to do arranging allottment of ward

& rooms in Hospital, cleaning, installing

electric light, sanitary inspection &

alterations necessary, accommodation for

motor. Called & saw Col Elgood G.S.O.

Encamped men in desert near Railway

Station under Capt O'Brien & Campbell.

In afternoon attended funeral service

of English Officer ∧Flying Corps & French corporal

(observer) who had been killed last night

while reconnoitering. By evening things at

Hospital began to look less depressing

Nurses & men have worked well.

Jan 29. Hard at work getting beds into

Hospital from Savoy Hotel. a German

Institution which has been shut up. Was

visited by Col. Manders. Deputy Director

Med. Services. The Australian transports

are held up at Ishmalia & are now

expected tomorrow at midday. The Australian

Submarine A. E. 2 which came home

with them, passed through canal today

SS. Kyama arrived from Alexandria.

She is returning to Australia with some

invalids & others. Aust Capt McIntosh.

Jan 29th Hospital inspected by Col Manders

DDMS Cairo. Making progress towards

provisions for recovering patients.

Heard story of aviators death. They had been

scouting over Turkish lines near Port Said

but machine went wrong. They landed

safely but too close to Turkish troops

so they burnt their aeroplane & walked

towards our lines along old camel

track leading to Port Said salt works

In the dark they were shot by an

Indian picket 120 shots were fired &

they received 12 hits.

Jan 30th By 8 o'clock train with Capt

Heron to Kantara 20 miles down line.

Inspected the Canal bank between salt

& fresh water canals to see if were

possible to run a motor all along it

to feed a hospital train. Track would

be difficult but worth trying.

Returned by Hospital train to El Tup &

inspected there. Brought back 17 sick

Indians who were met by our motors

& taken to Egyptian Hospital. One wounded

* Anarickmos

Turkish prisoner who had had a tough time
owing to course of white flag our men
had been ordered not to respect it.
This Turk was shot through pelvis. He lay
on ground and waved a white flag but an
Indian lancer charged him, grazing his back
& breaking his lance. He then dismounted
& emptied the magazine of the his rifle at the
Turk at about 15 yards. No result. He next
tried to knock his brains out with the butt
of his lance. Just then an English Officer
arrived & put the wounded Turk on a
camel to convey him to assistance.
The girth breaking our Turk landed on
his head but in spite of all is getting
on well.

Jan. 31st In afternoon to Salt works in
Police Launch with Capt Heron RAMC &
Major Wiles I.M.S. Inspected defences there with
view to organising removal of wounded.
Afternoon tea with Officer of Brahmins.
Detailed Major Richards to accompany
an expedition along coast in steamer [* Anarickmos]
conveying aeroplanes. Under command
of Capt Waldon Intelligence Officer. Object
being to pick up scouts & place others
by means of aeroplanes. Expect to be
away 5 or 6 days.

Lt. Maddull 7th A.L.H in difficulty having lost
ten men from transport. Lent him a picket

of ten men from A.C.H to pick up his strays.
None found. Inclined to think they had got back
on board.

Feb 1st 1915 Captain Campbell dispatched with
Sergt Symes & 2 men with motor car to Kantara
by train, to try camel track. 2 days provisions.
First two cases admitted to Hospital. Both
medical.
Dinner with Captain & Mrs Heron, Capt Whitworth

Jones also there. All very pleasant afterwards
to pictures 9.30-12. Heron is an RAMC
man in employ of Egyptian Govt. He has
been located in Port Said to eight months.

Feb 2nd - Arranged funeral of Trooper Jas. A. Stewart
3rd Light Horse Regt who died yesterday in Govt
Hospital Port Said from broncho-pneumonia
following measles.

Feb 3rd - Visited Egyptian & Indian Hospitals
under Dr Hayward & Major Wills respectively.
RMS Mongolia came in with Alison
McPhillamy on board travelling home with
the Knoxs. She looks rather thin having had
a trying time en voyage with sea-sickness.
Her boat will be held up here some days I
expect. Firing heard along canal esp. in
neighbourhood of Ismailia. 21 cases brought in
by Hospital train & removed by our motors.
Campbell came back for another car &

reported that there had been some fighting at
Kantara today. He had succeeded in working
over the desert with a motor having rhope on wheels.

Reported here that howitzer shell had burst in
armed cruiser in canal killing Captain &
12 men. Heavy firing from HMS Swiftsure
at Kantara & firing from a man of war at
Ismailia. One shot of the former burst
among bunch of enemy & laid them all
out. The wounded were chiefly Syrians
& were sent to Egyptian Genrl Hospital.
This ^7th Australian Hospital begins to look more shipshape.
Drainage nearing completion, operation theatre
which Major Girdon has taken a good deal
of trouble over looks well with white paint
over everything.

Feb 7th - We opened the operating theatre with
a couple of operations. The first PI Thompson
of the Clearing Hospital had appendicitis & a
territorial radical cure for hernia. I did the
first & Major Gordon the second. He is a
very pretty operator. Arrangements went off
satisfactorily but slow at first. Carlisle gave the
Chloroform & will improve with practice.
The fighting along the Canal came to
very little the other day. Official reports give
59 Turks killed 58 wounded & 190 prisoners.
Apparently they brought a pontoon bridge &
put it across the canal where it was
immediately destroyed. They have since fallen
back & we are expecting a more serious attack

soon. Janet must have been in the thick of it at
Ismailia as the attack was close up to that
town.

I dined with her & Mr & Mrs Bristow tonight.
He is an American Consul advantage of
not appearing to resemble his Countrymen in
any respect, in fact I suspect he is really
an Englishman. Mrs Bristow is pleasant,
has been a nurse, act 45? Two other ladies
of a schn similar age interested in Red Cross
work & Major Murphy I.M.S. of the Hospital
train made up the party. This afternoon
I had a very pleasant surprise. A man came
up to me while I was having afternoon tea at the
Casino Hotel & ask mentioning my name asked
if I remembered him. I did not like to tell him
who I thought he was, (viz Dr Dunn an old
fellow student at Barts & one of the best
fellows going) as I had heard Dunn was
dead some years ago. However it turned
out he had been nearly dead with tuberculosis
& the report got about he was dead! He is
now in fairly good health as long as he

takes care of himself. He has been to Egypt

for last 12 years for winter doing a practice
among visitors at Luxor. This year it is
off so he is port health officer at Port Said
for the time being. He photo is in one of my groups.

On Saturday last the Clearing Hospital played the
local cricket team which has an unbeaten
record which however at last had been
is end ∧to come to an end. Hospital winning .
Feb 10th - I went out to Kantara taking
Major Girdon. Captain Campbell took us
out in the car across canal & about two
miles along camel track on El Arish road
to place where Turks were encamped who
had made attack on Kantara a few days
ago. We saw their well & trenches also
the marks that the Swiftsure 7.5 shells
had made in the ground. The motor
worked well over the Desert. The Turks
had retired more than 20 miles & it
is considered doubtful if they will
make another attack on Canal departures.
They received a very nasty bump their
casualties amounting to about 3000
many times more than at first reported.
Feb 12th - Had game of bridge in afternoon
with two aviators at Capt Herons. The
first game I have played for some time.
Capt Todd & Paul were names the latter is
only a beginner. I dined with Dr Dunn at
Casino Palace Hotel & had a long yarn afterwards
about old Barts men.

Feb 13th - Got telegram ordering that nurses should
return forthwith to Cairo & report at Heliopolis.
Great distress among them all. It
seems as if they would prefer Port Said &
the Clearing Hospital to all the pleasures of
Cairo & their own unit. We think it is
only a preparatory move before having to
move on somewhere else ourselves.
Got my first letter from home - dated
Dec 13th. It had apparently travelled to
England & then back here. Also letters
from Ronald & Edith Wanostrocht.
Feb 14th - Received orders to hold myself in
readiness to move to Cairo at short notice.
Packed up most of hospital gear. Sent
of nurses by 12.30 train to Cairo. They
had worked well to make hospital efficient
& were disappointed not to have many
wounded & sick to practice on. Apparently
authorities feel that circ*mstances do not

warrant expense of this institution Rent

£100 per month &e, and evidence & one not
point to things developing in this direction.
We hear rumours of work at other end
of canal.

Feb 15th - Packing nearly finished. Waiting
further orders to move on. Received another
mail from home dated Dec 27th also
letter from Miss Price Chigwell.

Diary of Wilfrid Wanostrocht Giblin, 1914 - 1915 - Part 3 (2024)
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