in her Voluntary Aid Detachment uniform
Memoirists Some VADs left written records of their service: •
Lucilla Andrews, novelist whose autobiography
No Time for Romance included vivid descriptions of her WWII nursing experiences •
Enid Bagnold, British author of the novel
National Velvet, on which
the 1944 film with Elizabeth Taylor was based. Her account of her experiences are related in her memoir
A Diary Without Dates published in 1918 •
Vera Brittain, British author of the best-selling 1933 memoir
Testament of Youth, recounting her experiences during World War I •
Agatha Christie, British author who briefly details her VAD experiences in her posthumously published
Autobiography •
Frances Cluett, from Newfoundland, whose letters describe the horrors of World War I •
Lady Ursula d'Abo, English author who details her VAD experiences in her memoir titled ''The Girl with the Widow's Peak: The Memoirs'' •
E. M. Delafield, British author of the autobiographical
Diary of a Provincial Lady series and some 30 novels; her experiences working at the Exeter VAD Hospital provided her with material for one of her most popular novels,
The War Workers, published in 1918 •
Mollie Skinner (under the
nom de plume R. E. Leake) wrote
Letters of a V.A.D. (London: Andrew Melrose, 1918) • Mary Cameron (pseud?) wrote an autobiography
Merrily I Go To Hell (Allen and Unwin, 1932) including extensive experiences as V.A.D.
Medical personnel drivers from the Voluntary Aid Detachment with their vehicle, a Canadian Red Cross ambulance, at
Étaples, France, 1917 , Australia, c. 1940 People notable for their contributions to nursing, health, or science, or for their VAD service itself: •
Dame Anne Bryans , head of the Middle East Command of the Voluntary Aid Detachment during World War II, first director (and later chairman) of the St John and Red Cross Service Hospitals Welfare Department in 1945, vice-chairman of the British Red Cross Executive Committee in 1964 •
Edith Cliff , commandant of
Gledhow Hall Military Hospital, one of many such directors to be
honoured for her nursing work •
Violet Jessop, British ocean liner stewardess trained as a VAD nurse after the outbreak of World War I. She had been a stewardess aboard the
RMS Titanic when it sank in 1912 and was also aboard the hospital ship
HMHS Britannic (the
Titanic's sister ship) as a Red Cross nurse when it sank in 1916 •
Aileen Preston, worked for the VAD's Watson Unit, was head of the first autonomous British women’s ambulance unit and was the first woman in history to qualify for the
Automobile Association Certificate in Driving •
Marjory Stephenson , biochemist, bacteriologist and one of the first two women elected to the
Royal Society in 1945
Other Many VADs were prominent in fields outside their war work: •
Clemence Margaret Acland (1889-1973), English nature photographer, ornithologist and researcher •
Ida Nancy Ashburn, Australian headmistress •
Blanche Badcock, target rifle shooter who was the first woman to compete in the
King's Prize •
Mary Borden, Anglo-American novelist • The
Cadiz sisters, Irish suffragettes •
May Wedderburn Cannan, British poet • Dame
Rachel Crowdy, English nurse who was Chief of the Department of Opium Traffic and Social Issues Section of the
League of Nations from 1919 to 1931 •
Lottie Dod, English sportswoman best known as a tennis player. She won the
Wimbledon Ladies' Singles Championship five times in the late 19th century •
Amelia Earhart, American aviation pioneer •
Hilda May Gordon, British painter •
A. M. Irvine, author, wrote 28 books, some on a medical themes, mostly stories for girls •
Hattie Jacques, English comedy actress •
Angela Manners, aristocrat and socialite •
Naomi Mitchison, Scottish writer •
Olivia Robertson, British author and co-founder of the
Fellowship of Isis •
Sophia Duleep Singh, suffragette •
Venetia Stanley, aristocrat and socialite •
Freya Stark, explorer and travel writer •
Doreen Tovey, British writer on animals, President of
RSPCA for
North Somerset •
Jessie Traill, Australian painter •
Eleanor Vachell, Welsh botanist •
Anna Zinkeisen, Scottish painter and illustrator •
Doris Zinkeisen, Scottish painter, commercial artist and theatrical designer ==See also==