Search

Voluntary Aid Nurses – Anstie Grange Military Hospital

 

Red Cross Voluntary Aid Detachment © North Lincolnshire Museum Service
Red Cross Voluntary Aid Detachment © North Lincolnshire Museum Service

Anstie Grange Red Cross Hospital was staffed by the Commandant, a matron and five trained nurses. Voluntary Aid Detachment volunteers assisted with nursing and ran the pantry and kitchens. Many local women offered their services, but they were not professional nurses, and many would never have worked before the war.

Dorothy Gore-Browne

The Commandant was Cuthbert Heath’s niece. She was born in Calcutta, India, were her father audited the East Indian Railway. She grew up in Guildford and Kensington. Before taking charge of Anstie, she ran the Hill Hospital in Farnham. She was tall, statuesque and beautiful, and wore a red uniform with a long white veil. Genesta Heath wrote that ‘everyone loved the Commandant… simply because they could not help it’.

Full biography of Dorothy Gore-Browne

Evelyn Mary Habershon

Evelyn’s wealthy family lived in a large house named Brook Lodge in Holmwood. Her father was a gentleman and his sons were educated at Winchester and Cambridge. Of her three brothers, only one survived the war. 

Full biography of Evelyn Mary Habershon

Hilda Lee-Steere

Hilda was born in Western Australia. Her father’s family were the Lee-Steeres of Jayes Park and her grandfather had named his 100,000 acres of land in Australia Jayes Station. Hilda arrived in England by sea in 1915 and the following year she went to work as a VAD nurse in a mansion close to the family’s ancestral home. 

Full biography of Hilda Lee-Steere

Phyllis Bowen-Goodwin

Phyllis was the daughter of a wallpaper manufacturer. She grew up in Wimbledon but was living (with her mother and grandmother) at her grandmother’s sister’s home, The Hive in Holmwood, when she went to work at Anstie.

Full biography of Phyllis Bowen-Godwin

Dorothy Margaret Marshall

The daughter of the vicar of Ockley was 20 when she went to work at Anstie.

Full Biography of Dorothy Margaret Marshall

Return to Dorking in 1916 Home Page

Malcare WordPress Security