Eileen M. Sheehan, VAD front nurse and ambulance driver
Eileen M. Sheehan, Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) nurse, was born 1897 as eldest daughter of RMF Captain DD Sheehan MP. She joined the VAD organisation in 1916 and served as nurse and ambulance driver on the front. Attached to the 14th Military and General Hospital at Wimereux, north east France, she was disabled in a German bombing raid and hospitalised in Boulogne. Traumatized by militant intimi…
Atbalstītāji
- Niall O'Siochain
Autors
- unknown unknown
Temats
- World War I
- Medical
- Remembrance
- Transport
- Women
- Transports
- Pirmais pasaules karš
Digitālais objekts veids
- Photograph
- Fotoattēls
Datums
- 1917
- 1917
- 1917
Atbalstītāji
- Niall O'Siochain
Autors
- unknown unknown
Temats
- World War I
- Medical
- Remembrance
- Transport
- Women
- Transports
- Pirmais pasaules karš
Digitālais objekts veids
- Photograph
- Fotoattēls
Datums
- 1917
- 1917
- 1917
Piegādājošā iestāde
Agregators
Tiesību statuss šim digitālajam objektam (ja nav norādīts citādi)?
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Izveidošanas datums
- 2012-04-13 12:12:26 UTC
- 2012-04-13
- 2012-04-13
Periods
- europeana19141918:timespan/6db9d0141ffa949dded28b85a754ba88
Vietas
- Western Front
- Wimereux, France
Avots
- UGC
Identifikators
- 47264
- https://1914-1918.europeana.eu/contributions/3840/attachments/47264
Apjoms
- 24
Valoda
- English
- eng
Ir daļa no
- EnrichEuropeana
Gads
- 1917
Nodrošinošā valsts
- Europe
Kolekcijas nosaukums
Pirmo reizi publicēts Europeana
- 2019-09-11T08:28:04.891Z
Pēdējoreiz atjaunināts no piegādājošās iestādes
- 2023-06-05T08:05:33.085Z
Satura rādītājs
- Eileen M. Sheehan, Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) nurse, was born 1897 as eldest daughter of RMF Captain DD Sheehan MP. She joined the VAD organisation in 1916 and served as nurse and ambulance driver on the front. Attached to the 14th Military and General Hospital at Wimereux, north east France, she was disabled in a German bombing raid and hospitalised in Boulogne. Traumatized by militant intimidations experienced at the end of the war in her Cork family home, she spent her last years in an Epson, Surrey sanatorium (still convinced “they are outside waiting to get me”).