Skip to main content.

With The Royal Army Medical Corps in Egypt

Gelesen von Steve C

(4,25 Sterne; 4 Bewertungen)

Throughout the First World War, members of the Royal Army Medical Corps provided constant support for British and Allied military troops whether they were fighting on the frontline or engaged in other operations within all areas of the conflict.

With the Great War continuing unabated and the battlefront extending through Europe into the Middle East and beyond, a rapid increase in military medical support facilities and infrastructure was urgently implemented to handle the ever increasing number of wounded, maimed and sick troops evacuated from the combat zone that needed to receive urgent medical and life-saving care.

Commandeering and requisitioning suitable buildings and facilities for the purpose, the British and Allied forces increased the number of hospital beds available from just a few hundred to many thousands. But these were barely sufficient to cope, when you consider that within a few days of the first fateful landings on the Gallipoli Peninsula in April 1915, the wounded began to pour into Egypt. In the first ten days alone no fewer than 16,000 cases were landed and distributed among the hospitals ashore.

Published in 1918, this book is the personal memoir of Tickner Edwardes who was an operating theatre orderly based in Egypt during the First World War. In it, he brings his uniquely perceptive and eloquent writing style to document the roles and responsibilities undertaken by the R.A.M.C. in Egypt to maintain the health, welfare and well-being of all personnel in whatever field of operations they were engaged in. - Summary by Steve C (11 hr 4 min)

Chapters

Preface

4:02

Read by Steve C

Chapter 1 - Retrospect

25:06

Read by Steve C

Chapter 2 - Egypt And The Great War - Part 1

45:22

Read by Steve C

Chapter 2 - Egypt And The Great War - Part 2

36:50

Read by Steve C

Chapter 3 - ''The Long, Long Way To Achi Baba''

36:58

Read by Steve C

Chapter 4 - The R.A.M.C. In Desert Warfare

29:25

Read by Steve C

Chapter 5 - Kantara And Katia

38:47

Read by Steve C

Chapter 6 - The Defence Of Egypt In The West

17:56

Read by Steve C

Chapter 7 - The Sinai Desert Campaign. The Battle of Romani

33:35

Read by Steve C

Chapter 8 - El Arish Maghdaba Rafa

28:26

Read by Steve C

Chapter 9 - El Arish And After

19:09

Read by Steve C

Chapter 10 - Camp Sanitation And Conservancy

49:13

Read by Steve C

Chapter 11 - Epidemic Diseases

46:40

Read by Steve C

Chapter 12 - Field And Base Laboratories

17:43

Read by Steve C

Chapter 13 - Army Dental Surgery In Egypt

18:21

Read by Steve C

Chapter 14 - The Work Of The Mustapha Reception Station, Alexandria

14:15

Read by Steve C

Chapter 15 - The Medical Advisory Committee For The Near East

30:46

Read by Steve C

Chapter 16 - Military General Hospitals In Egypt - Part 1

51:08

Read by Steve C

Chapter 16 - Military General Hospitals In Egypt - Part 2

52:32

Read by Steve C

Chapter 17 - The Egyptian Labour Corps : Its Medical Organisation Under The R.A…

55:28

Read by Steve C

Chapter 18 - ''In Arduis Fidelis''

12:34

Read by Steve C

Bewertungen

A Triumph of Organization

(5 Sterne)

Wow! The British knew what they were doing. They were able to scale up from caring for a few thousand casualties (in the entirety of Egypt and the Suez Canal) to more than 16,000 after Gallipoli. London could ship out an entire hospital unit within a few weeks, and the author said the caregivers never ran low on morphine, chloroform, or disinfectants. Even if you don't have a specific interest in the history of healthcare, there is plenty of action and history to engage.