Difference between revisions of "Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service"

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(Added links to Alice Welford's photo album and badge at the Department of Special Collections, McFarlin Library, The University of Tulsa.)
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* National Army Museum [http://www.nam.ac.uk/online-collection/detail.php?acc=1954-09-18-7 1954-09-18-7]: QAIMNS badge awarded to Dame Ethel Hope Becher.
 
* National Army Museum [http://www.nam.ac.uk/online-collection/detail.php?acc=1954-09-18-7 1954-09-18-7]: QAIMNS badge awarded to Dame Ethel Hope Becher.
 
* [https://camc.wordpress.com/2012/05/08/staff-nurse-hetty-elizabeth-milnes/ Photos and biography of Staff Nurse Hetty Elizabeth Milnes]
 
* [https://camc.wordpress.com/2012/05/08/staff-nurse-hetty-elizabeth-milnes/ Photos and biography of Staff Nurse Hetty Elizabeth Milnes]
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* [http://cdm15887.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/search/searchterm/welford/order/nosort Photograph Album of Sister Alice Welford] and [http://orgs.utulsa.edu/spcol/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/12741914_10153963128859824_1237523047241659777_n.jpg Sister Welford's QAIMNSR badge]
  
 
== Official Sources ==
 
== Official Sources ==

Revision as of 09:24, 2 March 2017


Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
Years active: 27/3/1902 –
Country: United Kingdom
Service: British Army
Branch: Regular Army
Type: Medical
Specific type: Department
Full size: none
Sources for overview:
Created: 27/3/1902. Formed from Army Nursing Service by Royal Warrant.[1]
Sources for created:
Alternate names: QAIMNS
Sources for alternate names:
Disbanded:
Sources for disbanded:
For more information on what infobox fields mean, see documentation at military unit, command structure and theatre of war.


Personal narratives

Related media

Official Sources

Unit war diaries

None. Administrative organisations did not keep war diaries because they had no operational role.

See descendant unit pages for their war diaries.


Unit histories

Other official documents

  • The National Archives of the UK (TNA): WO 399, nurses' service records. Research guide with more information about these records. They contain files for over 15,000 individual nurses.

Other sources

References

  1. Army Order number 67 (1902)