Margaret’s WW1 Diary +100 Years

Journal Entry – Wednesday September 8th1915

Exeter. It is more than 3 weeks since I returned, & every day goes by so much the same there is very little to write about. But to day great event has taken place. The King & Queen have been to Exeter & visited No. 1 and No. 5 hospitals. Those of our patients who were well enough went to the garden of number 5, and we nurses marched behind them in our indoor uniform. Fortunately it was a fine day. We stood for nearly 2 hours in a very hot Sun, and at last the King & Queen arrived....

Journal Entry – Tuesday August 10th 1915

Warsaw was taken Saturday. On Saturday we all went to Tintagel for the day & took Nicholas & Elizabeth with us as well as Daisy & Freddie Smith. It was a cloudy day & when we got there a sea fog was hanging about, but it did not actually settle on the sea. We had our lunch in the field of Bossiney cove & then went down below for about one hour, when we walked to the Rocky Valley. It was very lovely, the colouring was beautiful, as owing to the constant rain the cliffs were green with fresh grass....

Journal Entry – Thursday August 5th 1915

Warsaw is practically in the hands of the enemy, they have taken some of the forts of Ivangorod. After a year of fighting the Germans on a Masters in Belgium & now they have almost got Poland & what have the Allies done? Stops the Germans getting to Paris. Last night we had an intercession service at 8, a few prayers & 2 hymns, quite a number of people came to it. It has been wet again today. Yest was a nice day. Father, Bob & I went to Langstone Moortown to call on Goeffrey Coleridge’s family who we heard...

Journal Entry – Monday August 3rd 1915

On July 24 I came home. It was glorious to get back again. I arrived at 2 PM & found the school treat taking place. In the house were all four of Franks children, Miss Andrews, Ursula & her baby & Evelyn. A goodly party. DJ is a lovely child, so sweet & gentle. The four are most unruly. Michael is rather a dear, & much improved in looks from when I last saw him. On Monday Frank Drewe turned & he & I has spent a good deal of time trying to drive Arthur’s old Talbot. It is very...

Journal Entry – Thursday July 22nd 1915

The Russians are holding their own. The most important point now is near the railway that runs from Ivangorod to Morow. If the Germans get that Railway then Warsaw cannot stand against them. My night duty time is drawing to a close. On Saturday I go home. We have had a new night Sister on called Ling, middle-aged & a Lady & thoroughly nice. She has been head in France working on a hospital train, out from Boulogne, & when she redefines our hospital & its work, or rather lack of work, very dull. She went off again 2 days...

Journal Entry – Monday July 12th 1915

A weeks go by. Soon the dreary time will be over. In the meantime the hospital was slowly emptying itself, & still no sign of fresh cases. Night after night I sit behind the screens, & listen to the signals & occasional mutterings of the patients. One man wants a drink every now & again & that is all there is to be done. So I have to spend my time working, & have made a smock for Michael, a coat & a frock for Dorothea Juliana & am making a very choice first coated frock for the expected one...

Journal Entry – Friday July 2nd 1915

There has been an advance in the Dardanelles but with fearful loss of life. Constantinople is as far off from being taken as it ever was & to think that at one time we thought its fall was only a matter of a few days. Great efforts are to be made now over the making of munitions, & there is to be a registry of every man, woman & child above the age of 15, so as to see what labour there is available for munition making. In the meantime my life of a hospital goes on as usual, except...

Journal Entry – Tuesday June 29th 1915

Yesterday fresh wounded, who came from the Dardanelles & as a matter of course were all convalescent & so still there is nothing to do but sit for hours together reading & working & struggling against sleep. One or 2 days this week I have been unlucky, & have not slept. This job is getting on my nerves & making me feel very depressed. If only there was something to do. Still this is a trial of patience. Lemberg has been taken by the Austrians but the Russian line has not been broken. Reginald spent the night here last week...

Journal Entry – Sunday June 20th 1915

This week has gone by very quickly & is now a month of this night’s job has passed. If only there was more to do, the time would not be so irksome. For 2 nights I was shifted down again to the medical wards, but I got nurse Skinner to say a word to night Sister & now I am back again in Ward 3. In this hospital we nurses seem to be able to arrange a good deal ourselves as to where we go. The matron is very easy going & lets us do what we like. In some...

Journal Entry – Sunday June 13th 1915

Yest morning, Sister Ker Grey came to me whilst I was making beds & said I could have a night off. Very kind of her & especially was I glad of it as Father & Dorothea were both coming to spend the week end. Also I have had very little sleep this week during the day, one day never a wink all the time. So off I rushed & after breakfast at the club with Marker, went to bed & slept until 2.30. Had tea with the Worthington’s in their garden & then went to the station, met old D...

Journal Entry – Sunday June 6th 1915

Life goes on so monotonously that there is very little to regard. I go to the hospital at 8.30 p.m., we have a meal & then go to our wards at 9. & Except when we go to other meals during the night we do not leave them. I am in ward 3 which is a very nice one, as it opens into ward 2 & I can go & chat to the other nurse. On the 2nd night we had wounded in. 2 very bad cases came into my Ward, & for a night or two these kept me...

Journal Entry – Tuesday May 25th 1915

On Saturday evening I got off & in great excitement went home, & spent a most glorious & absolutely perfect weekend. I have sent Miss Walsh to Kelly on Monday to have a rest, she seems to have enjoyed it much & looked a different person. Yesterday there [was] a great confusion in packing of Frank & his family to Bude, thanks to Ellis the children were got ready in time, but Michael was dressed on the doorstep. Father went off as his custom is, to the Devon Guild of Ringer’s meeting, & then on to London for the Central...

Journal Entry – Thursday May 20th 1915

Yesterday we had 17 fresh cases. 14 cot consequently I did not get off all day, but was on from 8 to 8.30 p.m. One boy was brought into Ward 7, shot right through the stomach & with pneumonia & bronchitis as well, so he entailed a good deal of work. Some of the cases were only wounded on Sunday midnight. To day has also been a very hard day, but I got off in the aft. There has been a political crisis. Lord Fisher has resigned from 1st Lord of the Admiralty, & a coalition government is to be...

Journal Entry – Tuesday May 18th 1915

Last week was a terrible one as regards the war, what with the loss of the Lusitania & in the fearful fighting in Belgium. Huge long list of casualties, yesterday’s list the longest that has appeared. 400 officers. One day last week Leonard Morshead’s name was among the wounded but I hear from home that it is only a slight wound in the arm. Had a letter from Agnes yesterday saying that Ruth was still very ill. Poor child it is now 3 weeks since Agnes’s first letter came, saying she was ill. On Sunday a man died in the...

Journal Entry – Sunday May 9th 1915

A really lovely & perfect day. I have a morning off & have been to service at St Glaves. On Friday evening we heard the news that the Lusitania had been torpedoed & has sunk at 2.30, but it was not until Sat morning that further details were known. She went down near Cork & great loss of life is feared. A useless & wicked crime, & one that is of no military importance. I was saying yest that if the Germans continue to use these asphyxiating gases, which are strictly against the Hague Convention, the French will bring into...

Journal Entry – Sunday May 5th 1915

Yesterday I saw in the list among those killed the name of John Fielder, 2nd Lieutenant, Seaforth Highlanders. He took part in the Sydenham pageant of last July, & was a friend of Guy Newman. Only 19 & the only son. Our troops have had some success in the Dardanelles. There will be heavy fighting out there. An appeal has been made for doctors to go out to the east. Rob Worthington & one or 2 others here are debating if they ought to go, & yet what is to be done in England if the best go. Even in...

Journal Entry – Sunday May 2nd 1915

One of the men in the ward had a bad op on Friday, and as he wanted watching our times off on Sunday were altered. I was given from 10-2. The weather has been hot & I have felt rather tired, so was glad to get off then. Went to St Glaves in Fore St. very nice service, matins followed by a sung Eucharist. The church is very old and small & although it is on the street yet there is a sort of country feeling about it. There was no sermon which was a comfort. In the aft. sat...

Journal Entry – Wednesday April 28th 1915

Yest we had a fresh batch of wounded, some of them very bad cases, but those in my ward are slight ones, none really ill. Matters went a lots more smoothly, and to day all has gone well, but it was a rush all the morning. I was off at 2 & went with a girl called Loveband for a drive in a tram. The weather was perfect, quite hot & this evening it is very warm, with a beautiful full moon. Nearly all our fresh cases were in the Hill 60 fight, they say it was a fearful business....

Journal Entry – Sunday April 25th 1915

A lovely morning with brilliant blue sky. Morning off duty.Bfast at 9.30, then off to the Cathedral for a parade service, to which we were ordered to go. The nave was full of soldiers. Mary & I joined on to the company from our hospital & by good luck got into most excellent seats, just behind the nave choir stalls. The service itself was dull & lifeless. A huge congregation more than half of which was there under compulsion & the rest for sight seeing, is not a very inspiring sight nor conducive to worship. After the service we were...