Weaving Wonders: A Red Cross Auxiliary Hospital during the First World War

Weaving Wonders: A Red Cross Auxiliary Hospital during the First World War

Join us for a hybrid event on the overlooked Voluntary Aid Detachment nursing support workforce in a Pennine mill town.

By Royal College of Nursing Library and Museum

Date and time

Wed, 24 Jul 2024 17:30 - 19:00 GMT+1

Location

Royal College of Nursing

20 Cavendish Square London W1G 0RN United Kingdom

About this event

  • 1 hour 30 minutes

Traditionally VADs are portrayed as selfless, middle class ‘ladies', who rushed off to the front risking life and limb to assist professional nurses in the trenches. But is this the full picture of members of the Voluntary Aid Detachments? In this talk, which introduces an overlooked (and less glamourous) group of nearly 100,000 women who ‘stayed behind’, Sue Hawkins explores one military hospital, based in the Pennine mill town of Holmfirth, to persuade you that the VAD cohort was much broader.

This event will have live subtitles. Doors open at 5.30pm (in person) and the online talk starts at 6pm.

Speakers

Sue Hawkins gained her doctorate on nursing in Victorian London in 2010, and has taught19th and early 20th century British social history. Her research interests focus on topics related to the history of medicine and women’s role in society. She has published on nursing as an emancipating occupation for late Victorian women, the history of women’s involvement in science and the development of early children’s hospitals in the UK and edited a collection on women in magazines.

I MAGE: RCN Archives

This event is open to all. There are limited in person tickets available.

If you have any questions or accessibility needs, please contact us on rcn.library@rcn.org.uk or 0345 337 3368.

Read the full terms and conditions for our events here.

Tickets

Organised by

The Royal College of Nursing Library and Museum is home to Europe’s largest nursing specific collection of materials. We have two exhibition spaces, a cafe and shop, and a nursing history collection open to all researchers. We host regular events on the history of nursing and related topics, as well as issues relating to health care and nursing research today.