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Western Front

293 bytes added, 06:32, 26 August 2017
Historical books online
*[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.32000004064699?urlappend=%3Bseq=7 '' "Sister"; the War Diary of a Nurse''] [during 1918] by Helen Dore Boylston 1927 Hathi Trust Digital Library. Boylston was an American nurse who left for France with the Harvard Surgical Unit, where she worked at General Hospital No. 22, British Expeditionary Force at Étaples. [https://authorsreallives.wordpress.com/2015/04/05/helen-dore-boylston-1895-1984-part-ii/ Helen Dore Boylston (1895-1984)- Part II: War Service] authorsreallives. She subsequently became a well known author of the ''Sue Barton, Nurse'' series of books for girls.
*[http://www.ourstory.info/library/2-ww1/Borden2/fz.html ''The Forbidden Zone''] by Mary Borden 1929. A transcription. American Field Service website. A later (2008) edition was published under the title ''The Forbidden Zone : a Nurse's Impressions of the First World War''. The Chicago-born millionaire's daughter funded and managed her own hospital unit for the French Army, L’Hôpital Chirurgical Mobile No.1, which moved location several times, including the Hospital of Evacuation 32 at Bray-sur-Somme, a dangerous location within artillery range of the front line.
:[https://archive.org/stream/2englishreview25londuoft#page/n13/mode/2up "At the Somme" [War Poetry<nowiki>]</nowiki>] by Mary Borden-Turner published in ''The English Review'', August 1917, page 97. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Borden Mary Borden] Wikipedia.*[httphttps://www.gutenbergarchive.org/ebooksdetails/26884 backwashofwar00lamoiala ''The Backwash of War: The Human Wreckage of the Battlefield as Witnessed by an American Hospital Nurse''] by Ellen N. La Motte 1916. Transciption. gutenberg.org. [https://archive.org/details/thebackwashofwar26884gut Archive.org version]. The author worked in a French military field hospital, situated ten kilometres behind the lines, in Belgium. The dedication in the book indicates the hospital was run by Mary Borden-Turner, see previous entry.
*[https://archive.org/details/ArnoldLeeseOutOfStep ''Out of Step: Events in the Two Lives of an Anti-Jewish Camel-Doctor''] by Arnold Spencer Leese. 1951 Archive.org. Born 1878, during WW1 Leese was an Army Veterinary Surgeon on the Western Front working with horses, with a prior short period in East Africa, and later also purchased camels for the Army in Somaliland. In the late 1920s he became a British Fascist politician.
*Article: [http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/219318 "Dermatology In A British General Hospital In France Including the Differentiation of "I. C. T." (Inflammation Connective Tissue)"] by Frank Crozer Knowles, M.D. ''Journal of American Medical Association'' (JAMA} October 19, 1918. Includes a comment regarding the prevalence of body lice [pediculus humanus humanus] and pubic lice on the majority of battlefield casualties.
====Cavalry====
*[https://archive.org/details/withcavalryinwes00aqui ''With the Cavalry in the West''] by "Aquila" [J D Delius] 1922 Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/details/picnicbasket00spea ''The Picnic Basket''] by Major-General Sir Edward Spears. 1968. Archive.org Lending Library. “He primarily deals here with Includes a chapter on a cavalry engagement at Nery“ Nery 1st September 1914, pages 134-161, which involved the [[11th (Prince Albert's Own) Hussars|11th Hussars]], in which he had been an officer since 1910. [https://wwwen.kirkusreviewswikipedia.comorg/book-reviewswiki/major-general-sir-edward-spears/the-picnic-basket/ ReviewEdward_Spears Edward Spears]}Wikipedia.
====Infantry and others====
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