THE DOCTORS April – December 1915

Rotary Club of Werribee 21 April 2020 Lt. Cyril L Verso Killed in Action, Flanders 19 .9. 1917 Rotary Anzac Peace Tour April 2006 Rotary ANZAC Centenary Peace Tour April 2015 The Gallipoli Peninsula , 1915 Anzac Cove today Lone Pine Shrapnel Valley Cemetery - 700 graves ANZAC Dawn Service at Gallipoli The Medical Corps (AAMC) at Gallipoli in 1915 At Gallipoli in 1915, the Medical Staff didn’t have:

X Antibiotics X Intravenous therapy X Blood transfusions X Anaesthesia (limited) X Pathology (very limited) X X-rays (very limited) X U/S, CT, MRI “The Man with the Donkey”

THE “MAN WITH THE DONKEY” GALLIPOLI APRIL 25 to MAY 19,1915 IN COMMEMORATION OF THE VALOUR AND COMPASSION OF THE AUSTRALIAN SOLDIER. Private John Simpson “The Man with the Donkey”

• Born in England as John Simpson Kirkpatrick • Enlisted in Perth as Jack Simpson • Stretcher bearer in 3rd FAB • On 25 April 1915, Simpson landed with others of his unit at North Beach. • Used a donkey he called “Duffy” to carry wounded men down to the Casualty Clearing Station on the beach. • Over 24 days he rescued over 300 men. • Killed by a sniper 19 , aged 22. • Recommended for V.C but never awarded. The most visited grave at Gallipoli: John Simpson Kirkpatrick (1892 – 1915)

1915

2015 Major General Sir Neville Howse VC, KCB, KCMG, FRCS 1863 - 1930

• Soldier-surgeon • First Australian to win V.C. • Only Australian doctor to win V.C. • Mayor of Orange, NSW • Senior M.O. at Anzac Cove • Director of AIF Medical Services • Knighted three times • Member of Australian Parliament • Minister for Defense, Health, Home & Territories and Repatriation • Died of pancreatic cancer, aged 67 Casualty Clearing Station (CCS) • Cleared the ambulances of their casualties to allow the bearers unimpeded traffic to & from the lines. • Cared for all wounded until evacuation. • Staffed by 8 officers & 77 other ranks. • Not well sheltered & exposed to gun fire

1st Australian C.C.S at Anzac Cove, 2nd May 1915

Colonel Graham Butler DSO (1872-1949)

• RMO 9th Battalion • On one of the first boats ashore on 25 April 1915. • Only MO at Gallipoli to be awarded Distinguished Service Order for his work “without sleep or rest” from 25th to 28th April. • Commanding Officer 3rd Australian General Hospital in France & Belgium 1918-1919. • 1923-1943 Author of Official History of the Australian Army Medical Services 1914-18. Regimental Aid Post (RAP)

Basic Medical Unit • Accompanied infantry into battle. • Consisted of the regiment’s doctor (RMO), 2 orderlies & 16 stretcher bearers (e.g. bandsmen…)

• Stretcher bearers brought wounded to RAP. • First Aid given; wounds dressed & soldier returned to front if possible. • If wounds or illness severe, soldier evacuated to Field Ambulance Unit. Captain Arthur Graham Butler DSO, 9th Battalion Regimental Medical Officer (RMO) at Gallipoli. The Official History of the Australian Medical Services 1914–1918 by Colonel A. G. Butler Work of AAMC 1915

1. Treating disease on the first convoy (38 ships carried 29,185 ANZAC troops) 2. In Egypt: ▪ Establish hospitals ▪ Manage disease outbreaks ▪ Train nonmedical personnel ▪ Assess fitness to serve 3. At Gallipoli ▪ Treat wounds ▪ Manage disease outbreaks Sr. E M Paten, Captain Conrick (?), Sr. J M Hart, Capt. (later Colonel) Arthur Graham Butler, (9th Battalion RMO), ▪ Manage sanitation Sr C M Keys, and Sr. B M Williams (seated). 3. Run hospitals on Lemnos Island and in Egypt. 8. Learn from each other / ANZAC Medical Society Hospital ship H.M.H.S. Gascon Australian General Hospital (AGH)

• Largest medical unit of AAMC • Equivalent of a major city civilian hospital. • Various departments (medical, surgical, laboratories) • 520 beds (grew to 3500 in Cairo) • 21 doctors, 43 nurses, 143 other ranks

Nursing staff, First A.G.H. in Cairo Lemnos Island ▪ 60 miles (95 kms.) from GallipolI (4 hours by sea) ▪ Australians established 3 large hospitals - No. 3 A.G.H. - No. 1 A.S.H. - No. 2 A.S.H. ▪ 2 smaller British hospitals, 2 Canadian hospitals and an Indian hospital also set up. ▪ 97,000 patients treated August to Nov. 1915 Dr Thomas Henry Fiaschi DSO (1853- 1927)

• Italian surgeon, wine maker, patron of arts • Educated at Universities of Pisa and Florence • Honorary Surgeon, Sydney Hospital 1884-1927 • Pioneered various surgical & anaesthetic techniques • Established Tizzana Winery at Windsor, on the Hawkesbury River. • Commanded the 3rd Australian General Hospital at Lemnos, 1915 • Developed beriberi (thiamine deficiency) and evacuated to England. • Retired in 1921 as Brigadier-General • Died of pneumonia in 1927, aged 73. The Truce to bury the dead, 24 May 1915 Sir Charles Snodgrass Ryan (a.ka. “Plevna” Ryan, 1853–1926.)

▪ Surgeon at Melbourne Hospital 1878-1913 ▪ Served with the Turkish Army at siege of Plevna against the Russians in 1978-79 and honoured.

▪ Author of “Under the Red Crescent” ▪ 1914 Assistant Director of Medical Services, First Division, AIF. ▪ Served as a surgeon to AIF in London

▪ August 1917 appointed honorary surgeon - general, Australian Military Forces.

▪ Many honours, C.B. (1916), C.M.G. and K.B.E. (1919).

▪ Died 1926, aged 73. Deaths from enemy action at Gallipoli

KILLED IN DIED OF TOTAL WOUNDED ACTION WOUNDS CASUALTIES

AIF 5833 1985 19,441 27259 NZAF 1904 495 4852 7251

AAMC 33* 35 225 293

* 13 doctors were killed or died in 1915 • 270 doctors served at Gallipoli or on Lemnos. • Treated 21,326 wounded (1985 died) • Cared for 63,649 sick (569 died) • Many suffered from the same diseases. • 13 doctors were killed or died in 1915. • Awards: 2 awarded DSO, 3 Military Cross and 34 Mentioned in Despatches N.B. All received the gratitude of the soldiers for whom they had cared.

Medical Officers of the AAMC and the RAMC following a lecture by Sir Victor Horsley on “First Aid in Head Injuries” given at Gallipoli on 5th October 1915. Australians on the Western Front, 1918-1918

France: • Fromelles • Pozieres • Bullecourt • Villers-Bretonneux • Le Hamel • Mont St. Quentin Belgium: • Messines • Ypres • Menin Road • Passchendale The Spanish Flu 1918 - 1919 “The greatest medical holocaust in history”

❖ Unusually deadly influenza pandemic ❖ Emerged at the end of the WW1 ❖ Infected 500 million people (27% of world population at the time) ❖ Killed 50+ million people ❖ Caused by the H1N1 subtype of the Influenza A virus. (H1N1 also caused the swine flu in 2009).

World population: • 1.8 billion in 1919 • 7.9 billion in 2020 The Death Toll from Pandemics The Spanish Flu in ❖ In Australia, 40 % of population of 5 million fell ill and 15,00 died. ❖ Australia’s death rate of 2.7 per 1000 of population was one of the lowest recorded of any country ❖ Mortality rate of 50% in some Aboriginal communities.

The Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne was transformed into a Spanish Flu hospital between March and August 1919. 4000 people were treated in the 6 months, 392 of whom died. Origins of the “Spanish Flu”

▪ Not from Spain ▪ Probably started in military camps in USA in 1917. ▪ In France, it was detected in the British, French, US, Australian & German Armies from May 1918 onwards and quickly spread. ▪ Example: In October & November 1918, the No. 3 Australian General Hospital in France admitted 2500 influenza patients and 214 died. ▪ World War One Armistice declared 11 November 1918 ▪ Homecoming soldiers wreaked havoc by spreading the deadly influenza. Australia’s response to the “Spanish Flu”

❖ From 17 October 1918, all ships, Hullo ! How are you? including the troopships, were quarantined. ❖ On 10 January 1919, the first cases of the virulent disease appeared in Melbourne. ❖ Quickly spread to Sydney where it hit hard. ❖ Gauze masks were made compulsory when people were out and about. A public health poster drawn by children's illustrator and author May Gibbs in 1919. It features a gumnut baby ❖ Meetings of 20 or more people were and a kookaburra sitting on a branch, with eucalyptus prohibited. leaves being used as surgical masks. ❖ Public events such as the Sydney Royal Easter Show were cancelled. ❖ Schools, theatres, & churches were closed ❖ In Melbourne, the Exhibition Building and 34 schools were converted into fever hospitals. Australia’s response to the “Spanish Flu” Sydney Morning Herald, 28 January 1919: “Australia must now face the fact that the scourge which has taken so heavy a toll from the rest of the world has invaded her own frontiers.”

Masked patrols roamed Sydney’s streets in 1919, trying to assist sick people in their houses. Vaccinations against the “Spanish Flu”

❖ Commonwealth Serum Laboratories (CSL) was established during WW1 to alleviate Australia’s dependence on imported vaccines. ❖ In 1918, prior to pneumonic influenza reaching Australia, CSL developed an experimental vaccine. Medical staff wearing protective masks while ❖ The cause of influenza was unknown then. vaccinating patients in Hyde Park, Sydney. ❖ The vaccine targeted the secondary bacterial infections that commonly caused death. ❖ Between October 1918 and March 1919, CSL produced 3 million free doses for Australian troops and civilians. ❖ It later evaluated the vaccines to be partially effective in preventing death in inoculated

individuals. Inoculation parade against influenza at an AIF camp in Wiltshire, UK prior to repatriation. March 1919 Returning soldiers and the “Spanish Flu”

❖ Unusually, men aged 25 – 40 were the most likely age group to die, so soldiers were hit hard.

❖ Longest serving soldiers seem to be less prone to influenza.

❖ At end of WW1 there were 167,000 Australians serving overseas. It took nearly a year to get them all back home.

❖ Most of them had to go into quarantine camps on their return and were not happy. The Spanish Flu in Australia ❖ Quarantining all shipping kept the Spanish flu out of Australia from October 1918 until January 1919 and lessened its impact overall. ❖ Two waves of Spanish flu: 1. Between January and April 2. Between June and July - a more lethal surge ❖ Cases tapered off in second half of 1919. Why? ❖ Fewer cases per head of population than most countries ❖ But still 15,000 people died making it the worst epidemic in Australia’s history. General Sir Brudenell White: “The success of the Medical Service in the AIF became famous because it was composed of a rare set of men to whom duty and self-sacrifice were second nature and by reason of their marked efficiency and common sense.” Lest We Forget

Sculpture commemorating the Australian doctors who served in WW1 AMA House, Royal Parade, Parkville.