
Convoy
Olive’s diary July 1st 1918
Began work at Beaucroft again [as a nursing orderly, after three weeks break in London] A convoy had come while I was away [like this one at the Royal Berkshire Hospital, Reading picture: BBC]
Olive’s diary July 1st 1918
Began work at Beaucroft again [as a nursing orderly, after three weeks break in London] A convoy had come while I was away [like this one at the Royal Berkshire Hospital, Reading picture: BBC]
James Sansom: July 4th 1918
After two days in Givenchy we move entrain to another village Estree Blanche where we remain for a while. We are in a camp which was used for German PoW and we have the epidemic amongst us that is raging all over the country
July 20th 1918 We march to Berquette on the Merville front and go in the front line for the first time in France. We get plenty of football practice here and good food
Letter from Alfred Forbes Johnson to his wife Essie, 8th July 1918.
The land is covered in poppies and corn flowers and all sorts of wild flowers. It is very different from what it was like in the winter.
I went down to some sports yesterday. They tried to get me to run an officers obstacle race but when I saw the first obstacle, climbing up a 20ft rope to get over a pole, I decided my running days were over.
8th July 1918 - Letter from Alfred Forbes Johnson to his wife Essie:
I wish I could have as many baths as I liked in a day. All our water has to be carried in petrol tins about a mile, so there is little to spare for baths
9th July 1918 - A small article on page 7 of the Daily Telegraph says 11 seaman have died on a ship after catching influenza, following 96 deaths last week in Birmingham.
All elementary schools in Wigan have been closed because of the epidemic
Students from the sixth form at Westfield Arts College joined us for a day at Dorset History Centre to explore the archives with engagement officer Maria Gayton and learn more about people’s lives in Dorset in 1918.
They visited the centre climate controlled archive with seven miles of shelves, listened to oral histories and learned about their importance.
Red Cross VAD nurses are back in Dorset 100 years on..serving cream teas! https://t.co/XMfWqgsMa5
— Voices from 1918 (@VoicesFrom1918) 12 July 2018
We are delighted that students from Westfield Arts College are joining us to learn more about life in Dorset as WWI ended. @VoicesFrom1918
— Dorset History Centre (@DorsetArchives) 12 July 2018
July 14th 1918
U-boat UC77 sunk by a mine off Flanders with the loss of all 30 hands. Weeks earlier on June 8th it was the target of an attack off Chideock, Dorset by airships, seaplanes and destroyers witnessed from the shore by Lady Mary Monkswell.
July 15th 1918
Peacefulness at the front has now reached a pitch which may be labelled suspicious, writes the Daily Telegraph. Such periods have generally preceded enemy attacks on a large scale. The paper reports influenza in the enemy is of a "serious character"
Anyone for tea? Students from Westfield Arts College are serving free Cream teas in @Brewery_Square Dorchester on Wednesday (11-1pm) to mark the launch of their silent film Tea for Two. The comedy, set in 1918, is part of their @ArtsAward @shascreenplay @ActivatePArts @artsdevco pic.twitter.com/PDo2H9e7z9
— Alastair Nisbet (@alastair) 16 July 2018
And here is that Lady Mary Monkswell diary entry about the U-boat (UC77 sunk off Flanders on July 14th 1918) that she witnessed on 8 June. @WW1IEPER1917 @LivesOfWW1 @VoicesFrom1918 pic.twitter.com/FKcUoRlV6O
— Dorset History Centre (@DorsetArchives) 16 July 2018
July 20th 1918
We march to Berquette on the Merville front and go in the front line for the first time in France. We get plenty of football practice here and good food.
[After three and a half years riding camels and eating oranges with the Egyptian Expeditionary Force, stretcher bearer James Sansom from Portland is swapping the heat and dust of Egypt for the trenches of northern France as he goes into the line for the first time in Europe...]
Olive's diary July 25th 1918
Gave a sing-song at Beaucroft. Only ourselves and the boys Wright, Hall and Sgt Silvester. Latter recited very well. Took off Commandant’s hymn singing: “See ourselves as others see us...”
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Explore by day, month or person here on the blog or on our five Twitter feeds: @Voicesfrom1918 @LadyMonkswell @MarieStopes1918 @JamesSansom230 and @OliveHarcourt.
Voices from 1918 has been developed by artists Sharon Hayden and Alastair Nisbet in partnership with Wimborne Community Theatre, Dorset History Centre and the Priest’s House Museum, Wimborne with funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
Thanks to all who have helped us with this project: Maria Gayton and staff at Dorset History Centre where we found Lady Mary Monkswell’s diaries; Joan Cocozza, ward of nursing auxiliary Olive Harcourt; Portland Museum where we found James Sansom’s diaries; the British Library and Wellcome Libraries; Priest’s House Museum in Wimborne and Gill Horitz from Wimborne Community Theatre.
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