Royal Air Force hospitals were British military hospitals formerly operated by the Royal Air Force (RAF) of the United Kingdom. They contained dedicated medical care facilities, at strategic locations wherever the RAF was operating, at home and abroad, to cater for in-depth military medical needs of Royal Air Force personnel. The hospitals were staffed by commissioned officer medical professionals of the Royal Air Force Medical Branch, and would serve as a higher tier of medical expertise and treatment above the normal station sick quarters, or later, station medical centre (SMC). The Royal Air Force had many military hospitals within the United Kingdom, along with several RAF hospitals abroad. They were primarily identified by the long-hand official designation Royal Air Force Hospital Nnnnn (where 'Nnnnn' is the geographic location name). This would typically be shortened to RAF Hospital Nnnnn (typically on road signs, in an identical manner to all Royal Air Force stations, aerodromes, and other RAF sites), and would be abbreviated RAF(H) Nnnnn.
The Second World War (WW2) prompted an expansion of RAF hospital facilities and locations: at home in the UK, in Western Europe, and further afield in the Middle East and East Asia. However, at the end of WW2, and the withdrawal by the RAF from the Middle- and Far East, this accelerated many RAF hospital closures. In the early 1990s, the 'thawing' of the Cold War resulted the near-total drawdown of Royal Air Force in West Germany (latterly known collectively as Royal Air Force Germany or RAFG) and the closure (by the RAF) of all RAF airbases. The British Army faced similar reductions in West German locations (known as the British Army of the Rhine or BAOR).
History
editThe first hospital for aviation personnel in the British military was at Hampstead in London. This facility opened in 1917, and was open to those from the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) and the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS).[1] Staffing at Royal Air Force hospitals was based on the number of beds, and the work that was undertaken at that facility. Some of the larger bases could have a roll of between 4,000 and 10,000 people to cater for. Halton, Cranwell, Matlock, Ely, and Torquay were considered separate entities from any RAF stations or bases. Halton and Cranwell had twenty and twelve medical officers (MO) respectively, whereas the large training bases at Cosford and St Athan only had eight each.[2] The original Royal Air Force Officers Hospital was opened at Finchley in 1919, moved to Uxbridge in 1925, and then to Torquay in 1940. A third move was precipitated in October 1942, when the hospital at Torquay was bombed, incurring nineteen fatalities.[3] Most of the hospitals were built in the 1930s or 1940s, to cater either for the RAF Expansion Period, or due to the outbreak of the Second World War.[4]
The hospitals were spread out across Great Britain, and at strategic points throughout the world. One oddity was Lancashire, which had five RAF hospitals within its borders (RAF Hospital Cleveleys, RAF Hospital Kirkham, RAF Hospital Morecambe, RAF Hospital Padgate, and RAF Hospital Weeton), which were deemed to be far enough away from enemy action in the Second World War to be relatively safe from bombing.[5] By the second half of the 1980s, significant reductions and closures had occurred; the RAF had five military hospitals (three in the United Kingdom, and two abroad; namely Ely, Halton, and Wroughton in the UK, with Akrotiri and Wegberg abroad). The average that each hospital had in terms of complement of staff was broken down as 22% officers, 54% other ranks, and 24% civilian employees.[6]
By 1996, all RAF hospitals in the UK and abroad had closed, apart from the hospital at RAF Akrotiri, but by that time, the hospital had been changed into a joint or tri-service asset, rather than strictly just for the Royal Air Force. All three forces in the United Kingdom concentrated their medical services within their bases, and in Ministry of Defence Hospital Units (MDHU), which meant that military medical staff were embedded within NHS public hospitals.[7]
Royal Air Force hospital locations
editUnited Kingdom
editlocation | coordinates | dates | beds[a] | details | ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bridgnorth, England | 52°32′02″N 2°22′48″W / 52.534°N 2.380°W | 1939 – 1946(?) | 140 (1940) | Situated at RAF Bridgnorth, and looked after basic recruits and the local population. | [8] |
Church Village, Wales | 51°34′19″N 3°18′58″W / 51.572°N 3.316°W | September 1942 – April 1946 | 290 (1943) | The hospital was located 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Pontypridd to avoid the areas being bombed in South Wales. | [9] |
Cleveleys, England | 53°52′26″N 3°02′49″W / 53.874°N 3.047°W | March 1943 – October 1945 | 200 (1942) | Known as the RAF Officers' Hospital, it took on the role of the officers' convalescent hospital after RAF Hospital Torquay was bombed in October 1942. | [10][11] |
Cosford, England | 52°39′04″N 2°17′20″W / 52.651°N 2.289°W | 1939 – December 1977 | 500 (1940) | (Motto: Via ad salutem – Latin: The road to health) | [12][13][14] |
Cranwell, England | 53°02′07″N 0°29′49″W / 53.0354°N 0.497°W | April 1918 – June 1940 | 355 (1939) | Replaced as a hospital by RAF Hospital Rauceby. Cranwell was reduced to a station sick quarters. | [15][16][17] |
Ely, England | 52°24′47″N 0°16′30″E / 52.413°N 0.275°E | 1939 – 1992 | 185 (1985) | The Princess of Wales Hospital[note 1] | [19] |
Evesham, England | 52°05′06″N 1°56′49″W / 52.085°N 1.947°W | August 1941 – March 1946 | 378 (1940) | As the hospital was not on a main RAF camp, it was used to treat cases of VD in the RAF. When treatment was complete, service personnel (both RAF and WAAF) could then be posted to a 'fresh' unit, rather than back to the one they arrived from. However, the stigma of the hospital treating such cases caused some local concern in the short-term. To combat this, non-VD patients were wheeled around the hospital environs and in the town to promote the notion that the hospital was actually there to treat injured service personnel. | [20][21][22] |
Finchley, England | 51°35′46″N 0°11′42″W / 51.596°N 0.195°W | May 1919 – June 1925 | Initially called the RAF Central Hospital, it was formed at Hampstead in 1917, it soon moved to Finchley. It was one of the three post-war RAF Hospitals along with Halton and Cranwell, but was the smallest and first to close. In June 1925, the hospital was moved to RAF Uxbridge, becoming the officer's Hospital. | [23][24] | |
Halton, England | 51°46′08″N 0°43′37″W / 51.769°N 0.727°W | 31 October 1927 – 31 March 1996 | 180 (1972) | The first purpose built RAF Hospital in the Air Force's history. On opening, it had 204 beds and the hospital building formed three sides of a quadrangle, the fourth side being the nurses accommodation. (Motto: Vigilance) | [25][19][26] |
Haverfordwest, Wales | 51°49′52″N 4°57′47″W / 51.831°N 4.963°W | February 1945 – April 1946 | Short-lived hospital. The RAF personnel in the area numbered between 5,000 and 6,000 (across RAF Haverfordwest, RAF Pembroke Dock and RAF St Davids), and medical services were undertaken at Haverfordwest under the aegis of Coastal Command (most other RAF hospitals being under Technical Training Command). Was raised to hospital status in 1945. | [27] | |
Henlow, England | 52°00′54″N 0°18′11″W / 52.015°N 0.303°W | 1939 – 1948 | 200 (1939) | [28][29] | |
Hereford, England | 52°05′06″N 2°47′42″W / 52.085°N 2.795°W | June 1940 – November 1947 | 192 (1942) | Cared for the service personnel at Hereford, Ludlow, Madley, Newland and Shobdon. | [30][29] |
Innsworth, England | 51°53′35″N 2°11′49″W / 51.893°N 2.197°W | June 1940 – September 1948 | 117 (1940) | [31] | |
Kirkham, England | 53°46′30″N 2°52′23″W / 53.775°N 2.873°W | June 1940 – June 1948 | 270 (1940) | [5] | |
Lochnaw, Scotland | 54°55′23″N 5°07′34″W / 54.923°N 5.126°W | June 1942 – October 1945 | Originally opened to cater for the remoter stations in south-west Scotland which were less able to reach civilian hospitals. The RAF Hospital was moved in the first year into Nissen huts built in the castle grounds. These had been provided for, and built by American forces which were then diverted elsewhere. However, the particular design of hut was at serious risk of fire, of which several did occur before the hospital could accept patients. | [32][33] | |
Locking, England | 51°20′17″N 2°54′14″W / 51.338°N 2.904°W | 1939 – 1949 | Based at RAF Locking, at its peak, the hospital on the training base had to provide medical needs to 7,000 personnel. In 1944, it treated many of the casualties arising from Operation Overlord (D-Day). After 1949, the hospital was downgraded to a normal station sick quarters (SSQ). | [34] | |
Matlock, England | 53°08′38″N 1°32′56″W / 53.144°N 1.549°W | October 1939 – May 1945 | Based in Rockside Hydro in Matlock, the facility was used between October 1918 and April 1919 for personnel returning from the First World War. During the Second World War, it was used as a neurological hospital. | [35][36] | |
Melksham, England | 51°21′07″N 2°07′37″W / 51.352°N 2.127°W | July 1940 – 1946 | 218 (1943) | [37] | |
Morecambe, England | 54°04′19″N 2°52′30″W / 54.072°N 2.875°W | February 1940 – April 1944 | RAF station hospital. Several hotels and large buildings were requisitioned in the Second World War for basic training, driver training, and engine and airframe fitters. | [38][39] | |
Nocton Hall, England | 53°09′54″N 0°24′47″W / 53.165°N 0.413°W | 1940 – 1983 | 740 (?) | Was used by the USAF post 1983, including during the First Gulf War, when it provided an overspill capability for wounded personnel. During the period under American control, the beds numbered 1,500. (Motto: Sicut qui ministrant – Latin: (We are) as they who serve) | [40][41][42] |
Northallerton, England | 54°20′35″N 1°25′48″W / 54.343°N 1.430°W | 1940 – 1947 | 450 (1944) | Operated by the RAF, but catered mostly for patients from the Royal Canadian Air Force (No. 6 Group RAF), whose bases were nearby. | [43][44] |
Padgate, England | 53°24′32″N 2°33′32″W / 53.409°N 2.559°W | May 1939 – 1957 | 110 (1941) | Originally opened at the recruit centre of RAF Padgate to deal with recruits, it later dealt with suspected smallpox cases among troops disembarking ships at Liverpool docks. | [45][46] |
Rauceby, England | 52°58′59″N 0°27′00″W / 52.983°N 0.450°W | June 1940 – January 1945 | 250 (1940) | Took over from RAF Cranwell Hospital in 1940. | [47] |
St Athan, Wales | 51°24′29″N 3°26′49″W / 51.408°N 3.447°W | 1940 – 1961 | The hospital was too close to the docks at Cardiff and was bombed several times, with one instance in 1940 requiring patients to be moved to civilian hospitals until repairs could be made | [48][29] | |
Torquay, England | 50°28′19″N 3°30′18″W / 50.472°N 3.505°W | October 1939 – October 1942 | 243 (1940) | Used as a convalescent hospital. Was bombed in October 1942 with 19 deaths and multiple injuries. | [12] |
Uxbridge, England | 51°32′42″N 0°28′16″W / 51.545°N 0.471°W | June 1925 – 1972 | This hospital opened in 1925 when the hospital at Finchley was closed down. After the officers hospital was moved in 1940, it became a WAAF hospital, then a station hospital until closure. (Motto: Count nothing human indifferent) | [49][50][51] | |
Weeton, England | 53°49′12″N 2°56′06″W / 53.820°N 2.935°W | May 1940 – December 1959 | 198 (1940) | The hospital survived past the end of the Second World War, with a commanding officer being appointed for the last time in June 1959. | [52][53] |
West Kirby, England | 53°22′19″N 3°10′55″W / 53.372°N 3.182°W | 1940 – 1957 | [29] | ||
Wilmslow, England | 53°20′10″N 2°12′11″W / 53.336°N 2.203°W | July 1940 – December 1958 | [29] | ||
Wroughton, England | 51°30′43″N 1°46′01″W / 51.512°N 1.767°W | 1941 – 1996 | 280 (1985) | In 1982, all aeromedical evacuations from the Falklands Conflict were assessed at Wroughton, being the nearest military hospital to RAF Lyneham (the disembarkation point). (Motto: Salubritas per industriam – Latin: Health through work) | [29][54][55][56][19] |
Yatesbury, England | 51°26′10″N 1°55′23″W / 51.436°N 1.923°W | February 1949 – December 1947 | 232 (1940) | [57][29] |
- ^ Peak capacity if known
Overseas
editlocation[a] | name[b] | coordinates | dates | beds[c] | details | motto | ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cairo, Egypt | RAF No. 5 Hospital Middle East | 30°03′46″N 31°16′26″E / 30.0629°N 31.274°E | March 1943 – March 1947 | Formed at Cairo in March 1942, and moved to Abassia in January 1943. | Alatos Recreamus – Latin: We restore to health the wing borne men | [58][59][60][61] | |
Aden, Yemen | RAF Khormaksar Hospital Beach | 12°49′52″N 45°01′44″E / 12.831°N 45.029°E | 1959 – 1967 | 163 (1959) | Smaller hospital in the Aden Protectorate adjacent to RAF Khormaksar. | Health is a crown on the heads of the fit that is seen by none but the sick[note 2] | [62][63][64] |
Aden, Yemen | RAF Steamer Point | 12°47′06″N 44°58′52″E / 12.785°N 44.981°E | 1928 – 1967 | 180 (1955) | Hospital was taken over by the RAF in 1928, and was used by all service personnel in the Aden Protectorate and their families. Merchant seaman also used the facilities. | Cuilibet adjumenta salutus | [65][66][67][68] |
Akrotiri, Cyprus | The Princess Mary's Hospital | 34°34′11″N 32°56′14″E / 34.5696°N 32.9373°E | 1963 – 1996 | 170 (1972) | Opened in 1963, the unit was turned into a military hospital in 1996, after all the RAF Hospitals closed. It continued as Joint military hospital until 2013. | Strive to heal | [69][70][71] |
Brussels, Belgium | RAF No. 8 General Hospital | 50°49′59″N 4°20′56″E / 50.833°N 4.349°E | September 1944 – 1945 | Was originally created at Ashton Down in England, and then moved to Bayeaux, Normandy after D-Day, before becoming permanent at Brussels. | [72][73] | ||
Changi, Singapore | 1°22′34″N 103°58′59″E / 1.376°N 103.983°E | 1947 – 1973 | RAF Hospital which opened post-war near to RAF Changi airfield. | Wings of mercy | [74][75] | ||
Habbaniya, Iraq | No. 6 RAF Hospital | 33°22′55″N 43°34′23″E / 33.382°N 43.573°E | December 1937 – 1956 | 500 (1937) | Was deemed to be an RAF General Hospital (RAFGH), but was downgraded to a station hospital in 1956. | [75] | |
Hinaidi, Iraq | 33°17′13″N 44°28′30″E / 33.287°N 44.475°E | ? – 1936 | A report from 1930/1931, stated that temperatures in the shade at Hinaidi were 49 °C (120 °F), which proved problematic in keeping patients cool. Hospital was moved to RAF Habbaniya in December 1937. | [76] | |||
Lagens, Azores | 38°45′47″N 27°05′20″W / 38.763°N 27.089°W | September 1943 – October 1946 | 150 (1943) | [77] | |||
Maison Carrée, Algeria | No. 2 RAF General Hospital | 36°43′16″N 3°08′13″E / 36.721°N 3.137°E | September 1943 – August 1946 | 200 | [78][79] | ||
Reykjavik, Iceland | RAF No. 11 General Hospital | 64°07′19″N 21°55′41″W / 64.122°N 21.928°W | March 1942 – 1946 | 200 (1942) | Taken over from the Army in 1942; was administered by Coastal Command. | [80][81][82] | |
Rostrup, Germany | 53°12′36″N 7°59′13″E / 53.210°N 7.987°E | 1952 – 1953 | The hospital was a temporary one, being replaced by RAFH Webgerg. The design of Rostrup was considered poor by the Air Commodore of the Construction Branch of the RAF, and he redesigned the plans, which were put into effect for Wegberg. | [83] | |||
Takoradi, Gold Coast[note 3] | 4°53′42″N 1°46′26″W / 4.895°N 1.774°W | January 1942 – November 1947 | 170 | [84][85] | |||
Wegberg, Germany, | 51°09′26.21″N 6°18′19.81″E / 51.1572806°N 6.3055028°E | November 1953 – April 1996 | 220 (1972) | The hospital was built to replace one at Rostrup. Wegberg was known as the 100-day hospital due to the amount of time it took to construct (which was actually 111 days). | Inter era sales – Latin: In [the] midst of ferocity, healing | [86][83][19] |
See also
editNotes
editReferences
edit- ^ Hopson, J.A. (5 October 1968). "R.A.F. Medicine: The First 50 Years". British Medical Journal. 4 (5, 622). London, England: British Medical Association: 49. doi:10.1136/bmj.4.5622.48. ISSN 0959-8146. OCLC 183305543. PMC 1912063. PMID 4877880.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 33.
- ^ Mackie 2001, p. 125.
- ^ TRAFBFW 1997, p. 64.
- ^ a b Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 218.
- ^ Downey 1987, pp. 10, 18.
- ^ "Evacuation / Hospital Treatment". Publications.Parliament.uk. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
Column 306W - In the last five years, Service personnel requiring hospital treatment in the UK, including those suffering from injuries sustained in theatre, have been treated at the following six MOD Hospital Units (MDHU).
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, pp. 37, 187–188.
- ^ "RAF General Hospital, Church Village, Pontypridd (UK); formed September 1942, disbanded..." discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 191.
- ^ "RAF Officers Hospital, Cleveleys, Blackpool (UK); formed May 1943, disbanded October 1945". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
- ^ a b Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 37.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 250.
- ^ "RAF Cosford Hospital Key Tag". collections.rafmuseum.org.uk. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 198.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 199.
- ^ "Lincolnshire HER". www.heritagegateway.org.uk. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
- ^ "Princess of Wales Hospital, Ely". www.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ a b c d Downey 1987, p. 19.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, pp. 203, 205, 206.
- ^ "RAF Hospital Evesham; formed August 1941, disbanded December 1945". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
- ^ Crang, Jeremy A. (2020). Sisters in arms : women in the British Armed Forces during the Second World War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-1107013476.
- ^ "RAF Central Hospital, formed at Hampstead in 1918 and moved to Finchley May 1919; became..." discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 48–49.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 252.
- ^ Gordon Fenwick, Ethel, ed. (November 1927). "The Royal Air Force Hospital Halton". The British Journal of Nursing. 75. London: 273–274. OCLC 1157714856.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, pp. 212–213.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 213.
- ^ a b c d e f g Mackie 2001, p. 366.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 215.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 216.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 220.
- ^ "RAF General Hospital Lochnaw, Stranraer (UK); formed July 1942, disbanded October 1945". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, pp. 222–223.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 364, 366.
- ^ "RAF Hospital Matlock (UK); formed September 1939, disbanded April 1945". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 227.
- ^ "RAF Morecambe [concept] · IBCC Digital Archive". ibccdigitalarchive.lincoln.ac.uk. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
- ^ Jordan, Trevor (2020). Morecambe Wings. Create Space. p. 2. ISBN 978-1482527315.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 214.
- ^ "Genuki: Nocton, Lincolnshire". www.genuki.org.uk. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
- ^ "TREATING THE WOUNDED". Los Angeles Times. 4 February 1991. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 230.
- ^ Riordan, Michael (2006). The Friarage Story (2 ed.). Northallerton: Friends of The Friarage Hospital. p. 23. OCLC 258043247.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 233.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 94, 366.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 234.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 107–108.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 40.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 364–366.
- ^ Philpott 2005, p. 218.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 243.
- ^ "Appointments In The Forces". The Times. No. 54523. 27 July 1959. p. 8. ISSN 0140-0460.
- ^ "Princess Alexandria's Hospital, Wroughton | RAF Heraldry Trust". rafht.co.uk. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 202.
- ^ Marsh, A R (1 November 1983). "A Short but Distant War - the Falklands Campaign". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 76 (11): 981. doi:10.1177/014107688307601119. PMC 1439657. PMID 6138433.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 263.
- ^ "RAF Hospital Middle East | RAF Heraldry Trust". rafht.co.uk. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 8.
- ^ "ROYAL AIR FORCE MEDICAL SERVICES, 1939-1945". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
- ^ "RAF Hospital Egypt, formed Cairo in March 1942 and moved to Abbassia in January 1943;..." discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 96.
- ^ Mackie 2001, p. 260.
- ^ Saeed Fareh Mohammed 2016, p. 111.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 110.
- ^ Saeed Fareh Mohammed 2016, p. 110.
- ^ Lee, David (1998). "The Unified Command in Aden". Royal Air Force Historical Society Journal (18). Royal Air Force Historical Society: 34. ISSN 1361-4231.
- ^ Williams, Simon, ed. (27 November 2020). "This week in history". RAF News. No. 1504. p. 3. ISSN 0035-8614.
- ^ "New Royal Air Force Hospital in Cyprus". The Lancet. 282 (7317): 1110–1111. November 1963. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(63)92875-7.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 223.
- ^ Vassallo, David (2017). A history of the Princess Mary Hospital; Royal Air Force Akrotiri 1963-2013. Vassallo. pp. 20–21. ISBN 9780992798017.
- ^ "No 8 RAF General Hospital (located at Ashton Down until July 1944 the "Bayeaux and..." discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1954, p. 161.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 265.
- ^ a b Mackie 2001, p. 369.
- ^ Morton, T. C. St. C. (June 1932). "The Ætiology and Treatment of Heat Exhaustion and Heat Hyperpyrexia, with Special Reference to Experiences in Iraq". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 25 (8): 1261–1271. doi:10.1177/003591573202500843. PMID 19988826.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 132–133.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1958, p. 174.
- ^ "RAF General Hospital; formed Maison Carree, Algeria, September 1943, disbanded August..." discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
- ^ Rexford-Welch 1955, pp. 351–357.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 128–131.
- ^ "Charles Hunter - EAST GRINSTEAD MUSEUM". eastgrinsteadmuseum.org.uk. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
- ^ a b Fox, John (2011). "Cold War - warm climes". Royal Air Force Historical Society Journal (51): 50. ISSN 1361-4231.
- ^ TRAFBFW 1997, p. 396.
- ^ Mackie 2001, pp. 131–132.
- ^ Pine 1983, p. 115.
Sources
edit- Air Historical Branch, Royal Air Force (1997). The Royal Air Force builds for war: a history of design and construction in the RAF, 1935-1945. London, England: Stationery Office. ISBN 0117724696.
- Downey, Gordon (1987). Ministry of Defence: Service Hospitals (PDF). nao.org.uk (Report). National Audit Office (through the House of Commons). Retrieved 5 May 2022.
- Mackie, Mary (2001). Sky wards : a history of the Princess Mary's Royal Air Force Nursing Service. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 0-7090-6976-6.
- Philpott, I. M. (2005). The Royal Air Force : an encyclopedia of the inter-war years. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Aviation. ISBN 1844151549.
- Pine, L G (1983). A Dictionary of mottoes. London: Routledge & K. Paul. ISBN 0-7100-9339-X.
- Rexford-Welch, Samuel Cuthbert (1954). Royal Air Force Medical Services Volume 1: Administration. London: HMSO. OCLC 1068597322.
- Rexford-Welch, Samuel Cuthbert (1955). Royal Air Force Medical Services Volume 2: Commands. London: HMSO. OCLC 872287803.
- Rexford-Welch, Samuel Cuthbert (1958). Royal Air Force Medical Services Volume 3: Campaigns. London: HMSO. OCLC 79553050.
- Saeed Fareh Mohammed, Muna (2016). Nursing services and training in South Arabia during the late British colonial period, 1950-1967 (Thesis). Manchester: Manchester Metropolitan University. OCLC 1063520728.