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==Brief History==
 
==Brief History==
The 4th Field Ambulance was formed in Victoria, initially as part of the ANZAC Division.  After Gallipoli it was assigned to the 4th Division along with the rest of the 4th Brigade, comprised of the 13th 14th 15th and 16th Battalions.  
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The Field Ambulance was a complete medical unit made up of previously separate and independent entities. These were The Bearer Division [previously working as Bearer Companies]; The Tent Division [previously working as Field Hospitals] and The Transport Division. The Field Ambulance at full strength composed of 10 Officers and 224 men. The Bearer Division had 18 stretcher squads each of 6 men. The Tent Division was comprised of doctors: 9 medical officers and 1 dental officer, as well as 1 Quartermaster of stores, batmen, clerks, cooks, dispensers, nursing orderlies, and the Transport Division, which had 60 men attached from the Army Service Corps. All this made up medical support for one infantry brigade. [Three to every Division].
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The 4th Field Ambulance was formed in Victoria, initially as part of the ANZAC Division.  The unit was transported to Egypt as part of the 1st Convoy, with a change of ship in Colombo. On arrival in Alexandria they were transferred by rail to Heilwan and from there to Heliopolis where they undertook further training until early April 1915. The 4th Filed Ambulance travelled from Alexandria to Gallipoli aboard [[HMT Californian]]. Following a three day voyage the Ambulance reached Lemnos, remaining there until the armada sailed for Gallipoli. While some of the bearers landed late on the first day, it wasn't until 28 Apr 1915 that the rest of the Field Ambulance landed. After Gallipoli the Field Ambulance was assigned to the 4th Division along with the rest of the 4th Brigade, comprised of the 13th 14th 15th and 16th Battalions.  
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When an attack or advance was undertaken, the RAP would follow up the units' forward elements and were thus exposed to enemy direct fire (rifles and machine guns) and indirect fire (artillery mortar fire and even gas). The Field Ambulance would have personnel deployed forward to retrieve casualties from the Regimental Aid Post (RAP) to the Field Ambulance - generally described as a Casualty Clearing Station (CCS). They would have to deploy forward to reach the RAP, and thus come under the same risks as the front line combat troops. They may have had a number of means to assist in casualty evacuation from light rail, horse drawn vehicles and even motor vehicles.  Or they could indeed also be stretcher borne. Field ambulance staff moved the wounded from the regimental aid post (just behind the front lines) to an advanced dressing station. The trip was about 1 to 3 miles (1.6 to 4.8km) and took around 6 hours to complete. Stretcher-bearers worked in relays. At least 36 stretcher-bearers handled each patient along the way.
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When an attack or advance was undertaken, the RAP would follow up the units' forward elements and were thus exposed to enemy direct fire (rifles and machine guns) and indirect fire (artillery mortar fire and even gas). he Field Ambulance would have personnel deployed forward to retrieve casualties from the RAP to the Field Ambulance - generally described as a Casualty Clearing Station (CCS). They would have to deploy forward to reach the RAP, and thus come under the same risks as the front line combat troops. They may have had a number of means to assist in casualty evacuation from light rail, horse drawn vehicles and even motor vehicles.  Or they could indeed also be stretcher borne. Field ambulance staff moved the wounded from the regimental aid post (just behind the front lines) to an advanced dressing station. The trip was about 1 to 3 miles (1.6 to 4.8km) and took around 6 hours to complete. Stretcher-bearers worked in relays. At least 36 stretcher-bearers handled each patient along the way.
 
  
 
Transport attached to a field ambulance included: three horse-drawn ambulance wagons; seven motorised ambulances; 10 general service wagons; three water carts; one motorcycle; one bicycle and one small two-wheeled Maltese cart.
 
Transport attached to a field ambulance included: three horse-drawn ambulance wagons; seven motorised ambulances; 10 general service wagons; three water carts; one motorcycle; one bicycle and one small two-wheeled Maltese cart.
  
Travelled from Alexandria to Gallipoli aboard [[HMT Californian]], landing on 28 Apr 1915. This unit also served in France and Belgium.
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Travelled from Alexandria to Gallipoli aboard [[HMT Californian]], landing on 28 Apr 1915. This unit also served in France and Belgium. Fifty six personnel died while posted to this unit.
  
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===Unit Personnel===
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* [[Douglas Campbell Wills Winning]] 15 Oct 1914 - 6 Mar 1916 - to 12th Filed Ambulance
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* [[Thomas Carberry MM MID]] 7 Nov 1914 - 28 Feb 1916
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* [[Jesse Thomas Manser]] 7 Dec 1915 - 28 Feb 1916
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* [[Walter David Francis Kerridge]] 9 Dec 1917 - 31 Mar 1919
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* [[John Murray]]
  
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===Patients===
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''1915 Gallipoli''
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* † [[Victor Henry Marshall]] 22 May 1915 & 30 Aug 1915
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* [[George Henry Martin MM MID]] 12 Aug 1915
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* [[George Weston Firns]] 5 Sep 1915
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* [[Aubrey Jesse Whittington MM]] 26 Sep 1915
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* [[James Owen Horrocks]] 22 - 25 Oct 1915
  
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''1916''
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* † [[Ernest Edward Lockhart]] 27 Feb 1916
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* [[Ernest Wells]] 29 Jul 1916
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* [[Lionel William Gibbs]] 5 Aug 1916
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* [[Alexander Russell Main]]14 Aug 1916
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* [[Arthur Edward Bingham]] 13 Oct 1916
  
Fifty six personnel died while posted to this unit.
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''1917''
===Patients===
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* † [[Daniel Adkins Lewis]] 2 Apr 1917
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* [[Clarence Victor Watson]] 2 Apr 1917
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* [[John Henry Wilkinson]] 2 Apr 1917
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* [[William Bertie Claude Moulden]] 4 - 9 Apr 1917
 
* [[Victor Norman Chandler MM]] 6 Apr 1917
 
* [[Victor Norman Chandler MM]] 6 Apr 1917
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* [[William Henry Gibbs]] 11 Apr 1917 & 10 Jul 1918 & 20 Sep 1918
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* [[William Simpson]] 11-12 Apr 1917
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* [[Sylvanus Benjamin Buckland]] 6 May 1917
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* [[George Turner]] 1 - 3 Jul 1917
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* [[Herbert James Reed]] 17 - 28 Jul 1917
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* † [[Robert Prior Bailey]] 5 Aug 1917
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* [[Benjamin Arthur McEvoy]] 5 Aug 1917
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* [[Alexander Robinson]] 22 Aug 1917
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* [[Leonard George Morgan]] 26 Aug 1917
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* [[George Emanuel Nettleton]] 28 Aug - ?? Sep 1917
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* [[Leslie James Godfrey]] 30 Aug - 3 Sep 1917
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* [[William Henry Baldwin]] ?? Oct 1917
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''1918''
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* [[Frank Myales]] 21 Feb 1918 
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* [[George Weston Firns]] 14 Apr 1918
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* [[Arthur James Allen]] 12 Jun 1918
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* † [[Beverley Loxton Bennett]] 4 - 5 Jul 1918
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* [[William Wright Casterton MM]] 4 Jul 1918
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* [[Alfred Gittins]] 4 Jul 1918
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* [[George Emanuel Nettleton]] 4 Jul 1918
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* [[Ralph Trotter]] 4 Jul 1918
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* [[Albert John Llewellyn Reed]] 3 Aug 1918
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* [[William Wilfred Gerald Liddington]] 21 Aug 1918
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* [[Samuel Arthur Vincent]] 15 Sep 1918
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* [[Thomas William Moore]] 18 Sep 1918
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* [[Ernest William George Reed]] 18 Sep 1918
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* [[Bernard O'Reilly]] 19 Sep 1918
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* [[John Thomas Clements]] 1 Oct 1918
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* [[Aubrey Turner]] 2 Nov 1918
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* [[Joseph Sowden Kidd MM]] 30 Nov 1918
  
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''1919''
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* [[Frank Myales]] 22 Feb 1919
  
 
===Individual Honours===
 
===Individual Honours===

Latest revision as of 23:54, 21 February 2023

4th Field Amb Gallipoli.jpg
Staff at the 4th Field Ambulance Hospital on the Gallipoli Peninsula. AWM photo 00680


Brief History

The Field Ambulance was a complete medical unit made up of previously separate and independent entities. These were The Bearer Division [previously working as Bearer Companies]; The Tent Division [previously working as Field Hospitals] and The Transport Division. The Field Ambulance at full strength composed of 10 Officers and 224 men. The Bearer Division had 18 stretcher squads each of 6 men. The Tent Division was comprised of doctors: 9 medical officers and 1 dental officer, as well as 1 Quartermaster of stores, batmen, clerks, cooks, dispensers, nursing orderlies, and the Transport Division, which had 60 men attached from the Army Service Corps. All this made up medical support for one infantry brigade. [Three to every Division].


The 4th Field Ambulance was formed in Victoria, initially as part of the ANZAC Division. The unit was transported to Egypt as part of the 1st Convoy, with a change of ship in Colombo. On arrival in Alexandria they were transferred by rail to Heilwan and from there to Heliopolis where they undertook further training until early April 1915. The 4th Filed Ambulance travelled from Alexandria to Gallipoli aboard HMT Californian. Following a three day voyage the Ambulance reached Lemnos, remaining there until the armada sailed for Gallipoli. While some of the bearers landed late on the first day, it wasn't until 28 Apr 1915 that the rest of the Field Ambulance landed. After Gallipoli the Field Ambulance was assigned to the 4th Division along with the rest of the 4th Brigade, comprised of the 13th 14th 15th and 16th Battalions.


When an attack or advance was undertaken, the RAP would follow up the units' forward elements and were thus exposed to enemy direct fire (rifles and machine guns) and indirect fire (artillery mortar fire and even gas). The Field Ambulance would have personnel deployed forward to retrieve casualties from the Regimental Aid Post (RAP) to the Field Ambulance - generally described as a Casualty Clearing Station (CCS). They would have to deploy forward to reach the RAP, and thus come under the same risks as the front line combat troops. They may have had a number of means to assist in casualty evacuation from light rail, horse drawn vehicles and even motor vehicles. Or they could indeed also be stretcher borne. Field ambulance staff moved the wounded from the regimental aid post (just behind the front lines) to an advanced dressing station. The trip was about 1 to 3 miles (1.6 to 4.8km) and took around 6 hours to complete. Stretcher-bearers worked in relays. At least 36 stretcher-bearers handled each patient along the way.


Transport attached to a field ambulance included: three horse-drawn ambulance wagons; seven motorised ambulances; 10 general service wagons; three water carts; one motorcycle; one bicycle and one small two-wheeled Maltese cart.

Travelled from Alexandria to Gallipoli aboard HMT Californian, landing on 28 Apr 1915. This unit also served in France and Belgium. Fifty six personnel died while posted to this unit.

Unit Personnel

Patients

1915 Gallipoli

1916

1917

1918

1919

Individual Honours

  • 2 x Distinguished Service Order
  • 6 x Military Cross
  • 2 x Distinguished Conduct Medal
  • 1 x Bar to Military Medal
  • 49 x Military Medal
  • 4 x meritorious Service Medal
  • 9 x Mentioned in Despatches
  • 1 x Belgium Croix de Guerre
  • 1 x French Medaille Des Epidemies


Notes


External Links