Women's Hospital Corps
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The Women's Hospital Corps (WHC) was a military unit of the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) during the World War I. It was formed by British women medics under the leadership of Louisa Garrett Anderson and Flora Murray, two outspoken suffragettes.[1][2]
Auxiliary hospitals in Paris and Wimereux
Garrett Anderson and her partner Murray approached the French embassy in London in August 1914 with the plan to set up a medical centre in France to care for wounded soldiers, in addition to the official British military hospital in Versailles. The British military had rejected the use of women as military doctors.
The British female doctors and nurses of the WHC established and ran two field hospitals in France from mid-September 1914 to February 1915, the Hôpital Auxiliaire in the Hôtel Claridge on Paris's Avenue des Champs-Élysées with around 100 beds and soon afterwards, due to the large number of wounded at Boulogne-sur-Mer, another at the Château Mauricien in Wimereux.
The Paris hospital received the first wounded on 16 September 1914 and was initially only supported by private donations and the French Red Cross.
Endell Street Military Hospital
The performance of the WHC was quickly recognised. As early as 18 February 1915, Garrett Anderson and Murray had the support of Sir Alfred Keogh in his capacity as Director-General Army Medical Services and were commissioned by the Ministry of Defence to build and run a military hospital in a poorhouse in St Giles' Church Parish in Endell Street, Covent Garden. Keogh's decision was not shared by many members of the British Military Medical Corps, who predicted the closure of the military hospital within six months.
The military hospital, run by Garrett Anderson and unusually for the time run entirely by women, had a capacity of 573 beds and cared for around 26,000 patients during its existence from May 1915 to December 1919, including 24,000 war wounded.[1] In total, more than 7,000 operations were performed at the Endell Street Military Hospital. The hospital was later demolished and a residential building now stands on the same site.[3]