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Tag: No. 1 Canadian General Hospital

No. 1 Canadian General Hospital Organized at Valcartier in September 1914 under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Murray McLaren. Most of personnel from No. 5 Field Ambulance (Active Militia), Montreal. Left Quebec 30 September 1914 aboard SCANDINAVIAN. Arrived in England 14 October 1914. Strength: 30 officers, 168 other ranks. Arrived in France 14 May 1915. Etaples, May 1915 – July 1918; Trouville, July 1918 – 4 February 1919.

MIKAN No. 3404025
Canadian nursing sisters working amongst ruins of the 1st Canadian General Hospital, which was bombed by the Germans, three nurses being killed. MIKAN No. 3404025

Demobilized in Montreal in April 1919. Disbanded by General Order 211 of 15 November 1920.

  • Nursing Sister Gladys Maude Mary Wake in the Great War

    Nursing Sister Gladys Maude Mary Wake in the Great War

    Mount Wake named to remember Canadian Army Medical Corp Nursing Sister Gladys Maude Mary Wake, of Esquimalt, who died 21 May 1918 of wounds received 2 days earlier during the air raid on No.1 Canadian General Hospital at Etaples, France.

    Photo of Gladys Wake – © IWM (WWC H22-10)
    Photo of Gladys Wake – © IWM (WWC H22-10)

    Gladys Maude Mary Wake born 13 December 1883 at Esquimalt, graduated from Victoria’s Jubilee Hospital School of Nursing in 1912, and volunteered with the Canadian Expeditionary Force in 1916.

    Canadian Army Medical Corps

    Posted to the Duchess of Connaught Canadian Red Cross Hospital at Taplow, then to the Canadian General Hospital at Salonica, Greece, before being taken on strength 12 May 1918 at No.1 Canadian General Hospital, Etaples, the week before the air raid.

    19 May 1918

    The air raid of 19 May 1918 described in detail by Sergeant-Major A P Reid.

    Etaples Military Cemetery

    Casualties buried 7pm, 22 May 1918. Nursing Sister Gladys Maude Mary Wake buried in the Etaples Military Cemetery, France, grave 5, row L, plot XXVII. Also a tablet to her memory in St. Paul’s Church, Esquimalt.

    Note British photographer Second Lieutenant Thomas Keith Aitken also in attendance. His partner, Lt. John Warwick Brooke captured film footage of the ceremony.

    Following another largely attended funeral, German aircraft return before midnight and drop a few more bombs, though none near the camp.

    Casualties

    Sixty-six patients and staff (including two other Canadian nursing sisters: Nursing Sister Margaret Lowe and Nursing Sister Katherine Maud Mary MacDonald) died as a result of this raid.

    Nursing Sister Margaret Lowe
    Nursing Sister Margaret Lowe

    Twenty-eight Other Ranks arrive on 23 May to replace the hospital’s own casualties.

    Nursing Sister Katherine Maud Mary MacDonald
    Nursing Sister Katherine Maud Mary MacDonald

    Mount Wake (2,320 m)

    NE of junction of Meager Creek and Lillooet River, NW of Pemberton, Lillooet Land District. 50°39’31″N, 123°18’07″W at the approximate centre of this feature. Adopted 11 November 1998 on 92J/11.

    Mount Wake
    Mount Wake

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