Illustrations
2.1Dorothy Temblett in better days (postcard dates 21 July 1904), Author's Collection.
3.1Garden Terrace, Rosa Morison House, New Barnet (c.1916), CMAC SA/MWF/C.44, Wellcome Library, London.
4.1X-Ray Car with Tent, clearly indicated as belonging to the SWH, British Medicine in the War 1914–1917 (London: British Medical Association, 1917), Wellcome Library, London.
4.2‘Coarse striation. Skiagram two days after wounds. (Artery injured and red degenerated muscle). On third day arm blue, cold and swollen. Amputation saved life’, Agnes Savill, ‘X-Ray Appearances in Gas Gangrene’, PRSM, 10 (1917), 4–16; 15.
4.3‘Shell wound of right knee-joint. Gas in joint. Triple anaerobic blood infection. Recovery after serum treatment’, Frances Ivens, ‘A Clinical Study of Anaërobic Wound Infection, with an Analysis of 107 Cases of Gas Gangrene’, PRSM, 10 (1917), 29–110; 70.
4.4‘Latent infection. Shell removed from ethmoid four months after receipt of wound. Bacillus perfringens and streptococci present’, Ivens, ‘A Clinical Study’, 76.
4.5‘Woman Surgeon and Suffragette’, Punch 149 (4 August 1915), 107, Wellcome Library, London.
4.6Louisa Brandreth Aldrich-Blake: Comité Britannique de la Croix Rouge Française. Diploma Presented for service to France, 10 May 1920, WMS 5796, Wellcome Library, London.