WW1 Australian Women Deaths
Historical Research
– Looking for the Evidence By Jennifer Baker ( Jenny Baker )
Australian Women who gave their lives in WW1
Research Disclaimer : Please note that This Research was done many years ago now :
so the information contained may now be out of date , photos gone missing or web links broken
My apologises : But It has become an impossible task to try and keep it up to date - Jenny
Hospital Ships - Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service - 1 Death
Edith Blake
Edith Blake, Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve.
Drowned on the Hospital Ship Glenart Castle 01 February 1918 to 28 February 1918 .
Died 26 February 1918
Cause of Death Drowned at sea on the Glenart Castle Hospital ship
Age at Death 32
Cemetery or Memorial Details 40. Hollybrook Memorial, Southampton
Rank Staff Nurse
Unit Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service - Glenart Castle Hospital ship & a year to nursing German prisoners of war at Belmont, Surrey.
Service British Army
Edith Blake ( Blake St. Nurse: E., Q.A.I.M.N.S.R. killed on HS Glenart Castle - sunk 26/2/1918 )
Daughter of Charles and Catherine Blake, of 9, Vista St., Sans Souci, Sydney.
Australian War Memorial Commemorative Roll entry
Name Blake, Edith
Service Number
Unit Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
Conflict 1914-1918
Commonwealth War Graves Commission entry
BLAKE, EDITH
Rank: Staff Nurse
Date of Death: 26/02/1918
Age: 32
Regiment/Service: Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
Panel Reference
Memorial HOLLYBROOK MEMORIAL, SOUTHAMPTON
Additional Information:
Daughter of Charles and Catherine Blake, of 9, Vista St., Sans Souci, Sydney.
http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/2894293/BLAKE,%20EDITH
Sister Edith Blake pours medicine for a patient in a ward at the No 17 General Hospital.
Sister Edith Blake of San Souci, NSW, served with the Queen Alexandra Imperial Nursing Service and was killed when the hospital ship she was on, the HMHS Glenart Castle, was sunk by a German U-boat on 26 February 1918.
Next of Kin Plaque : Sister Edith Blake, Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
AWM Item : Next of Kin Plaque : Sister Edith Blake, Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
Description
Bronze next of kin plaque showing Britannia holding a laurel wreath, the British lion, dolphins, a spray of oak leaves and the words 'SHE DIED FOR FREEDOM AND HONOUR' around the edge. Beneath the main figures the British lion defeats the German eagle. A raised rectangle above the lion's head bears the name 'EDITH BLAKE'.
History / Summary
Edith Blake was born in Redfern in 1885 and trained as a nurse at The Coast Hospital (now Prince Henry Hospital) at Little Bay. Joining the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (QAIMNS) in response to a British request for 200 Australian nurses, Blake embarked for overseas service aboard the RMS Malwa in April 1915.
Disembarking in Egypt, Blake joined 1 Australian General Hospital, Cairo on 2 May nursing men wounded on Gallipoli. She nursed in Egypt for 18 months later transferring to 17 British General Hosptial, Alexandria. Towards the end of 1916 Blake transferred to the hospital ship Essequibo where she remained for six months. In May 1917 she was assigned to a newly establish hospital in Belmont, Surrey caring for German prisoners of war.
Applying for a transfer later that year Blake was assigned to the hospital ship Glenart Castle which she joined in Liverpool on November 12.
On 26 February 1918 Sister Blake was killed when the Glenart Castle, was sunk by the German U-boat UC-56 off Lundy Island in the Bristol Channel. The ship had been travelling from Newport, South Wales to Brest, France to pick up men wounded on the Western Front. Her name is recorded on the Hollybrook Memorial, Southampton. Her family placed a small memorial notice in the Sydney Morning Herald on the first anniversary of her death:
For her there were no flowers
To adorn the unmarked surface of the water;
The ocean alone decks her grave with gifts of pearls and shell,
And wreathes her brow with seaweeds rare.
1st Published : 21 Oct 2011 Page Updated: 22 Sept 2020 © Looking for the Evidence : Jennifer Baker ( Jenny Baker )