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 The establishment of a Field Ambulance

In no way should modern readers confuse this with our current-day usage of the word Ambulance (meaning the vehicle). A Field Ambulance was a unit, not a vehicle. It was a mobile, horse drawn mostly, army medical unit.

There is a separate page for Light Horse Field Ambulance

Each infantry Division had 3 Field Ambulances, each of which was divided into 3 Sections. In turn, those Sections had Stretcher Bearer and Tented subsections. The Field Ambulance was composed of 10 officers and 224 men, as shown below. 

A Section

65 in total

  • Lieutenant-Colonel, in command of the Ambulance and A Section
  • Captain or Lieutenant in command of Stretcher Bearer subsection
  • 1 Sergeant and 1 Corporal
  • 1 Bugler
  • 3 Privates (wagon orderlies) and 36 Privates (bearers)
  • Captain or Lieutenant in command of Tent subsection
  • Quartermaster, Sergeant-Major, 2 Sergeants, 2 Corporals
  • 15 Privates (including a cook, a washerman and 2 orderlies)

B and C Sections

128 in total

  • Captain or Lieutenant in command of Stretcher Bearer subsection
  • 1 Sergeant and 1 Corporal
  • 1 Bugler
  • 2 Privates (wagon orderlies) and 36 Privates (bearers)
  • Major, Captain or Lieutenant in command of Tent subsection
  • Quartermaster, Sergeant-Major, 4 Sergeants, 2 Corporals
  • 13 Privates (including a cook, a washerman and 2 orderlies)

Attached

  • A Section also had a Sergeant, 10 Drivers and 4 officers batmen attached from the ASC. B and C Sections each had a Sergeant, 9 Drivers and 3 batmen attached. An ASC driver for the cooks wagon was also attached.

As with all other units, the Field Ambulances relied heavily on horses for transport, and had an establishment of 14 riding and 52 draught and pack horses. They worked the 23 wagons, 3 water carts, 3 forage carts, 6 GS wagons, 10 ambulance wagons, and the cooks wagon. The Ambulance also had a single bicycle.  

Neither officers or men carried weapons or ammunition.

Each unit also included 7 motor ambulances. A workshop to maintain them was added to the Division, although in 1916 it was absorbed in the Supply Column.

A Sanitary Section ( consisting of a Lieutenant or Second-Lieutenant, 2 Sergeants, 2 Corporals, 20 Privates and 1 batman) was added to the Division in early 1915. It's job was to maintain as far as possible clean water supplies, cooking facilities and billets. The Sanitary Sections came under Corps or Army control from March 1917 onwards.

Allied soldiers (USA?) awaiting transport to a CCS.

The role of the Field Ambulance

A chain of medical establishments stretching from the front-line positions back to hospitals in the United Kingdom, India and elsewhere was established wherever the British Army was deployed. Depending on the nature of the wound or sickness, a man requiring treatment may have by-passed some of the steps in the chain. The Field Ambulance played a very critical role, as it received men soon after they had received their wound. If it was possible, a wounded man would first be treated at a Regimental Aid Post, a small and often temporary position near or in the front lines. Here a Medical Officer with 2  orderlies and a number of stretcher bearers (from units of the Division) would carry out first-aid. This might be sufficient treatment to allow the man to carry on (in the event of superficial cuts for example), or in other cases be something to enable him to pass to the next stage, the Field Ambulance.

The Field Ambulance would attempt to treat the man, or again just do enough to ensure he could be passed back to the next point, the Casualty Clearing Station (CCS). The theoretical capacity of the Field Ambulance was 150 casualties, but in battle many would simply be overwhelmed by numbers. The Ambulance was responsible for a number of points along the evacuation chain for the casualty, from the Bearer Relay Posts up to 600 yards behind the Regimental Aid Posts, through the Advanced Dressing Station (ADS), to the Main Dressing Station (MDS). It also provided a Walking Wounded Collecting Station, as well as various rest areas and local sick rooms. The Ambulances would usually establish 1 ADS per Brigade, and 1 MDS for the Division.

The men of Field Ambulances saw the full horror of war casualties and often became them: the cemeteries on and behind the battlefields mark the location of many of them, and the men of the CCSs.


The Regimental Aid Post; RAP

The medical support for the Army developed rapidly as the size of the army grew, and as the nature of the wounds, sickness and other ailments faced in this war became clear. The lessons learned in the early phases of the war included those concerning the need for speedy treatment of wounds. A casualty's chances of survival were much greater if he could be attended to quickly.

Front-line units, such as infantry battalions, were able to provide only the most superficial medical care. Located near the front line, often in a support or reserve trench, was a Regimental Aid Post, attended by the Battalion Medical Officer and his orderlies and stretcher bearers. A wounded man would either make his own way there if possible, or be carried there. The facilities were crude and often just sufficed to carry out light first aid, give the casualty a drink, or just pass him down the chain to the ADS. The RAPs were manned by troops of the infantry or other unit.

Casualties moving on to the ADS were moved by hand carriage, wheeled stretchers, trolley lines, etc as conditions permitted. From 1916, relay posts for stretcher bearers were established every 1000 yards or so. To avoid congestion, certain communication trenches were allocated for the removal of casualties.

Wounded men and survival

The Advanced Dressing Station

Admissions of wounded men to Hospital, Western Front 1916 (Source: Official History)

 

Number of men

% of total admitted

Died in hospital

36,879

7.3%

Returned to duty after treatment

169,842

33.6%

Evacuated to UK for further treatment

290,461

57.5%

The Field Ambulance attached to the infantry Brigade provided one or more Advanced Dressing Stations in reasonable proximity of the front lines. The ADS was better equipped than the RAP, but could still only provide limited medical treatment. Men's wounds could be dressed, and some emergency operations carried out. In times of heavy fighting, the ADS would be overwhelmed by the volume of casualties arriving. Often, wounded men had to lie in the open on stretchers for a considerable time. The wounded man would be passed on down the line to a CCS, often by the wagon transport of the Divisional Supply Column. Buses, charabancs, light and broad gauge railways were also used as conditions allowed.

In addition to the ADS, the Field Ambulance was also responsible for the stretcher bearer relay posts, walking wounded collecting stations, sick collecting stations and rest stations. A larger version of the ADS, the Main Dressing Station, was often provided for the Division.

Medical re-grading

The Casualty Clearing Stations

After a medical examination, a man would be reclassified into a service grade. These grades changed during the war, splintering into ever more-closely defined groups. The man would be assigned to a unit depending on his medical grade. The CCS was the first large, well-equipped medical facility that the wounded man would visit. It's role was to retain all serious cases that were unfit for further travel, treat and return slight cases, and evacuate all others. It was usually a tented camp, although in the static trench areas the accommodation would sometimes be huts. 

CCS's were often grouped into clusters of two or three in a small area, usually a few miles behind the lines and on a railway line. A typical CCS could hold 1,000 casualties at any time, and each would admit 15-300 cases, in rotation. At peak times of battle, even the CCS's were overflowing. Serious operations, such as limb amputations, were carried out here. Some CCS's were specialist units, for nervous disorders, skin diseases, infectious diseases, certain types of wounds, etc. CCS's did not move location very often, and the transport infrastructure of railways usually dictated their location. Most casualties came away by rail, although motor ambulances and canal barges also carried casualties to Base Hospitals, or directly to a port of embarkation if the man had been identified as a Blighty case. 

(In 1916, 734,000 wounded men were evacuated from CCS's by train; another 17,000 by barge, on the Western Front alone. There were 4 ambulance trains in 1914, and 28 by July 1916). The serious nature of many wounds defied the medical facilities and skills of a CCS, and many CCS positions are today marked by large military cemeteries.

CCS's also catered for sick men. Generally, considering the conditions, the troops were kept in good health. Great care was taken in reporting sickness and infection, and early preventive measures were taken especially for Trench foot which was responsible for about 12% of casualties.

Once admitted to a Hospital, the soldier stood a reasonable chance of survival. More than half were evacuated to the UK from a General or Stationary Hospital for further treatment or convalescence.

The Stationary Hospitals, two per Division, could hold 400 casualties. The General Hospital could hold 1040 patients. They were located near the Army's principal bases at Boulogne, Le Havre, Rouen, Le Touquet and Etaples. The establishment of a General Hospital included 32 Medical Officers of the RAMC, 3 Chaplains, 73 female Nurses and 206 RAMC troops acting as orderlies, etc. The hospitals were enlarged in 1917, to as many as 2,500 beds.

Field Ambulances; 

Colour patch (shoulder patch), formation and transport detail

these details from http://www.unsw.adfa.edu.au/~rmallett/index.html by Ross Mallett

These were medical units assigned to divisions. There was one per brigade. Numbers corresponded those of the brigades. The light horse field ambulances had only two sections instead of three. The infantry light ambulances also operated with only two sections from March 1916 until after arrival in France, when they returned to three in order to conform with the British army. After the armistice, the two section establishment was reintroduced.

1st Field Ambulance (New South Wales) [First Division]
Formed Sydney August 1914 for First Division. Departed Sydney Euripides 29 October 1914.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

1st Light Horse Field Ambulance [Anzac Mounted Division]
Formed New South Wales 18 August 1914. Departed Sydney Southern 23 September 1914 and Melbourne Southern 18 October 1914. Assigned to Anzac Mounted Division March 1916. Returned to Australia Ulimaroa 13 March 1919 and Orari 16 May 1919 arriving Fremantle 19 June 1919, Adelaide 26 June 1919, Melbourne 30 June 1919, Sydney 4 July 1919. 
Egypt, Gallipoli, Sinai, Palestine

2nd Field Ambulance (Victoria) [First Division]
Formed Victoria August 1914 for First Division. Departed Melbourne Wiltshire 18 October 1914. 
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

2nd Light Horse Field Ambulance [Anzac Mounted Division]
Formed Queensland September 1914. Departed Brisbane Borda 16 December 1914. Assigned to Anzac Mounted Division March 1916. Returned to Australia Madrus 28 June 1919 arriving Fremantle 24 July 1919 and Melbourne 31 July 1919.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Sinai, Palestine

3rd Field Ambulance [First Division]
Formed Queensland August 1914 for First Division. Departed Brisbane Rangatira 29 September 1914.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

3rd Light Horse Field Ambulance [Australian Mounted Division]
Formed Queensland 2 October 1914. Departed Brisbane Chilka 2 February 1915. Assigned to Anzac Mounted Division March 1916. Attached to Imperial Mounted Division February 1917. Assigned to Australian Mounted Division June 1917.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Sinai, Palestine

4th Field Ambulance [Fourth Division]
Formed Victoria September 1914. Departed Melbourne Berrima 22 December 1914. Attached to New Zealand and Australian Division January 1915. Attached to New Zealand and Australian Division January 1915 to February 1916. Assigned to Fourth Division February 1916.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

4th Light Horse Field Ambulance (1)
Formed Queensland 1915. Departed Brisbane Borda 17 and 23 June 1915. Disbanded in Egypt March 1916.
Egypt

4th Light Horse Field Ambulance (2) [Australian Mounted Division]
Formed Moascar, Egypt 18 February 1917. Attached to Imperial Mounted Division February 1917. Assigned to Australian Mounted Division June 1917.
Egypt, Palestine

5th Field Ambulance (New South Wales) [Second Division]
Formed New South Wales 1915. Departed Sydney Ajana 31 May 1915 and Ceramic 25 June 1916. Assigned to Second Division July 1915.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

5th_lh_fa.gif (1142 bytes)5th Light Horse Field Ambulance [Australian Mounted Division]
Formed as Camel Field Ambulance. Renamed 5th Light Horse Field Ambulance July 1918
Palestine

6th Field Ambulance (Victoria) [Second Division]
Formed Victoria 1915. Departed Melbourne Ajana 4 June 1915. Assigned to Second Division July 1915.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

 7th Field Ambulance [Second Division]
Formed Enoggera, Queensland, 3 May 1915. Departed Brisbane Ascanius 24 May 1915 and Adelaide Geelong 31 May 1915. Assigned to Second Division July 1915. Attached to New Zealand and Australian Division September 1915 to December 1915.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

8th Field Ambulance (Victoria) [Fifth Division]
Formed 13 August 1915 at Liverpool, New South Wales and Mitcham, South Australia. Departed Melbourne Ascanius 10 November 1915. Assigned to Fifth Division February 1916.
Egypt, Gallipoli, Western Front

9th Field Ambulance (New South Wales) [Third Division]
Formed Liverpool, New South Wales 7 March 1916 for Third Division. Departed Sydney Argyllshire 11 May 1916, Ajana 5 July 1916 and Benalla 5 July 1916.
Western Front

10th Field Ambulance (Victoria) [Third Division]
Formed Melbourne, March 1916 for Third Division. Departed Sydney Beltana 13 May 1916, Ascanius 27 May 1916, Persic 3 June 1916, Wandilla 6 June 1916 and Runic 20 June 1916.
Western Front

11th Field Ambulance
Formed Mitcham, South Australia, 1 March 1916 for Third Division. Departed Sydney Beltana 13 May 1916, Adelaide Suevic 3 May 1916, Melbourne Wandilla 6 June 1916 and Melbourne Berrima 4 July 1916.
Western Front

12th Field Ambulance [Fourth Division]
Formed Egypt 24 February 1916 for Fourth Division from C Sections of 4th and 6th Field Ambulances.
Egypt, Western Front

13th Field Ambulance [Fourth Division]
Formed Egypt February 1916 for Fourth Division from C Sections of 3rd and 7th Field Ambulances.
Egypt, Western Front

14th Field Ambulance [Fifth Division]
Formed Tel-el-Kebir, Egypt 25 February 1916 for Fifth Division from C Sections of 1st and 2nd Field Ambulances.
Egypt, Western Front

15th Field Ambulance [Fifth Division]
Formed Tel-el-Kebir, Egypt 24 February 1916 for Fifth Division from C Sections of 5th and 8th Field Ambulances.
Egypt, Western Front

16th Field Ambulance [Sixth Division]
Formed Wareham, England 16 March 1917 for Sixth Division. Disbanded 18 September 1917.
England

17th Field Ambulance [Sixth Division]
Formed Windmill Hill, Andover, England 15 June 1917 for Sixth Division. Disbanded 25 October 1917.
England

Camel_Field_Ambulance.gif (388 bytes)Camel Field Ambulance
Formed early 1917. Departed Melbourne Boorara 10 May 1917. Arrived Egypt 20 June 1917. Renamed 5th Light Horse Field Ambulance June 1918.
Sinai, Palestine

 

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