Memorabilia of George Pugin Meldon (Royal Army Medical Corps)
Medals
1 cap badge
photographs
1 silver plaque
1 Irish Times obituary
George Pugin Meldon (grandson of Augustus Pugin) was born in Dublin in 1875. He was a medical doctor who served with the Royal Army Medical Corps. Be was based in Dublin Hospital, Boulogne, France. He was also involved in St. John's Ambulance Brigade, Dublin 1916. He died in 1950.
I have provided his medals, cap badge, photographs, silver plaque and Irish Times obituary.
Photograph of George Pugin Meldon (Royal Army Medical Corps)
Photograph
CONTRIBUTOR
Jeanne Meldon
DATE
-
LANGUAGE
eng
ITEMS
10
INSTITUTION
Europeana 1914-1918
PROGRESS
METADATA
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Jockey connections in Royal Army Medical Corps
23 Items
Small notebook from Gilbert Wall with daily account of his movements and a record of seeing the King. Photograph of the nurses and doctors - Gilbert is 14th from right second row down. || My father Gilbert Wall was born in Hartlebury, Worcestershire, in 1890. He was one of 16 children and his family was involved in horse racing. Gilbert was a jockey, as were his brothers Bob, James and Charles. James was a jockey for the Kaiser before the war, and Charles a trainer in France. Gilbert wanted to be a vet, but was placed with the Royal Army Medical Corps. A photo here shows the hospital staff in 1917. Gilbert's notebook shows a day by day account of his involvement in the war, including the day he saw the King. After the war on February 4,1923 he had a fall from a horse called “Plumardo” and sustained a fracture to skull. After this hard hats became compulsory for jockeys. Gilbert also ran the Hinds Head Pub in Lambourn. He died in 1956 aged 66.
Photographs of John Grogan | Royal Army Medical Corps and medals of his nephew B. O'Farrell | 8th Hussars
6 Items
X medals of B. O'Farrell Royal Army Medical Crops records of John Grogan 4 photrographs of John Grogan || My grandfather, John Grogan, was born in Carlow on 4 July 1896. He joined the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1914, at the age of 18. During the war he was a stretcher bearer, and one of his medal records mentions Egypt as a theatre of war. According to my father, on the way to Gallipoli he was injured and picked up in the water near Greece, from where he was brought to England. He sustained a leg injury and couldn't return to the fighting after this. However, he was in France until 1920 with the Graves Commission, as a gardener. One of the photographs provided was taken in 1916 when he was in France. He was wearing a black button on his uniforn as he was in mourning for his mother, whose funeral he was unable to attend. A second photograph shows him with two French soldiers, possibly taken after the war when he was working for the Graves Commission. A third photo show him with a mandolin, with a note on the back. There is a fourth photograph, date unknown, of him in a graveyard, probably in France post-war. I have included his R.A.M.C. records. John Grogan died in March 1946. I have also provided the medals of B. O'Farrell, a nephew to John Grogan, who died during the war and was buried in France, He as in the 8th Hussars (no. 11432). || || Medal || Medal of John Grogan's nephew, B O'Farrell || || Photograph of John Grogan, Royal Army Medical Corps || Photograph || Western Front
The Royal Army Ordnance Corps
87 Items
Images of two souvenir shells. Postcards (and pdf of postcard collection). || Adam Malcolm was my grandfather and he was born in 1890. During the First World War he served with the Royal Army Ordnance Corps (he was a conductor, a type of warrant officer); he went to France in the spring of 1915 (March or April) and in 1917 was awarded the Military Cross. He was part of the Altopiano offensive in Italy in 1918 and won an Italian medal. I also have a collection of postcards, some of which are embroidered and many of which are of pictures and cartoons used for propaganda. || || Western Front || Images of two shells kept as souvenirs || Artillery