If there was one thing that showed our
unpreparedness for war on a large scale, it was the neglect to
anticipate accommodation for wounded. This did not apply only to the
New Zealanders—British, French, Colonial and Indian suffered alike.
The regimental medical officers and stretcher bearers did more than
mortal men could be expected to do. But a man hit up on Walker's Ridge
or at the head of Monash Gully, after receiving his field dressing at
a sheltered corner of a trench or in the regimental aid post, had to
be carried in the heat, down bullet-swept valleys and along the
dangerous beach.
Here the surgeons and orderlies of
the Field Ambulances redressed the wounds, gave the men something to
eat and drink, and placed them out of the sun, away from the torturing
flies. Even in these Field Ambulance dressing stations men were not
immune from the shrapnel which swept the beach. The Turk could not be
blamed for this, as we had, of necessity, to place our hospitals
wherever there was room. Streams of men constantly arrived, some
walking, many on stretchers — Zionists with tears streaming down
their faces, determined Colonials and pathetic-looking Indians —
wounded in our cause, now separated from their fellows, and miserable
because they could not understand the sahibs' language.
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| The
Tragedy of the Anzac Wounded. Men, sick unto death, lying
in the scuppers; tired, suffering, uncomplaining men with
bloodstained kits and wounds that became septic before
Alexandria was reached. |
When night came, the picket
boats would move into the little Red Cross wharves, and the wounded
men were carried to the barges. When a tow was ready, the picket boat
started on its journey for the hospital ship or transport. The high
ground surrounding Anzac Cove ensured that bullets clearing the crest
went many hundred yards out to sea. Some days, when Turkish firing was
brisk, the sea was whipped into a white foaming line where the bullets
splashed angrily into the water. Through this barrage of singing
bullets the Red Cross barge must go. Picket boats or trawlers could
not dodge from place to place like soldiers in Monash Gully, so they
had to risk it, and take it in their course.
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Hospital
Ship and Hospital Carrier in Mudros. |
Outside the range of these
“overs” were the waiting ships. The hospital ships proper had good
appliances for handling wounded. A long box would be lowered over the
side, the man and the stretcher placed bodily into it, and hauled up
on to the deck, where he was seized by waiting orderlies and whisked
away to wards for a diagnosis, a hot bath, some very necessary
insecticide, and a meal to suit his particular needs. But the hospital
ships soon became overcrowded. Hundreds of men were accommodated on
the decks without cots. They did not complain. They came to the war
voluntarily, and took what was coming to them as a matter of course.
Ask a sorely wounded man if he wanted anything, and if it was not a
drink of water, it would be a laconic "Have you got a green?"”
He seemed more annoyed with the ration cigarettes than he was with the
Turk.
Presently the cry would be, “Ship
full!” and the next load would be taken to an ordinary transport,
dirty, full of vermin, and entirely unsuited for handling wounded. But
it had to be. Nothing better was offering. So the wounded
men—tossing about on the barge, seasick, with their clothes stiff
with blood and their heads burning with the fever resulting from
wounds—were hauled up with the improvised tackle to the dirty decks
of the transport. There were few medical officers. Some came from the
overworked and understaffed field ambulances ashore, and laboured like
galley slaves against the tremendous inrush of broken men. Naval
surgeons and dressers left their battleships and toiled heroically
among the wounded Colonials.
But there were not enough doctors to
do a tenth of the work. In the old British way, we were paying for
unpreparedness with the flesh and blood of our willing young men. On
one ship, the only man with any knowledge of medicine was the
veterinary officer, who, assisted by clerks and grooms of the waiting
Echelon B, saved dozens of lives by prompt and careful attention. So,
with a score of men dying on each ship every night, the transports
crept with their cargoes of human wreckage to the port of
Alexandria—the hospital ships going on to Malta, Gibraltar, or even
England. In Egypt, great emergency hospitals were opened, and
everything possible was done to alleviate the dreadful suffering of
the heroic and uncomplaining soldiers of the Mediterranean
Expeditionary Force.