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Flora Sandes

Flora Sandes (Serbian Cyrillic: Флора Сендс, 22 January 1876 – 24 November 1956) was a British woman who served as a member of the Royal Serbian Army in World War I. She was the only British woman officially to serve as a soldier in that war.[1] Initially a St. John Ambulance volunteer, she travelled to the Kingdom of Serbia, where she was welcomed and formally enrolled in the Serbian army. She was subsequently promoted to the rank of Sergeant major, and, after the war, to Captain.[2] She was decorated with seven medals.[3]

Flora Sandes
Sandes in Serbian Army uniform, ca. 1918
Born22 January 1876
Nether Poppleton, Yorkshire, England
Died24 November 1956(1956-11-24) (aged 80)
Suffolk, England
Allegiance Kingdom of Serbia
Service/branchSerbian Army
Years of service1914–1922
RankCaptain
Battles/warsWorld War I
AwardsOrder of the Star of Karađorđe

Biography

Early life

Flora Sandes was born on 22 January 1876 in Nether Poppleton, Yorkshire, the youngest daughter of an Irish family. Her father was Samuel Dickson Sandes (1822–1914), the former rector of Whitchurch, County Cork, and her mother was Sophia Julia (née Besnard).[4][5] When she was nine years old, the family moved to Marlesford, Suffolk; and later to Thornton Heath, near Croydon, Surrey.[4][6][7] As a child she was educated by governesses.[5] She enjoyed riding and shooting and said that she wished she had been born a boy.[8] She learned to drive, and drove an old French racing car.[8] She took a job as a secretary.[8]

In her spare time, Sandes trained with the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY), founded in 1907 as an all-women mounted paramilitary organisation, learning first aid, horsemanship, signalling and drill. She left the FANY in 1910, joining another renegade, Mabel St Clair Stobart, in the formation of the Women's Sick and Wounded Convoy Corps. The Convoy saw service in Serbia and Bulgaria in 1912 during the First Balkan War. At the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, she volunteered to become a nurse, but was rejected due to a lack of qualifications.[9]

Military career

Sandes nonetheless joined a St. John Ambulance unit raised by American nurse Mabel Grouitch, and on 12 August 1914 left England for Serbia with a group of 36 women to try to aid the humanitarian crises there.[4][8][10] They arrived at the town of Kragujevac which was the base for the Serbian forces fighting against the Austro-Hungarian offensive.[11] Sandes joined the Serbian Red Cross and worked in an ambulance for the Serbian Army's 2nd Infantry Regiment.[4] In 1914 she went riding with a Serbian soldier who, impressed with her equestrian skills, told her she was wasted as a nurse and should enlist as a soldier; she told Dr Isabel Emslie, "I've always wished to be a soldier and to fight."[citation needed]

In 1915 Sandes struggled persistently to get to the front (despite the efforts of people such as the British Consul, who instructed her to return to safety), eventually joining the ambulance of the Second Regiment at the Babuna Pass. During the Great Retreat through Albania, all the other ambulance staff fled or were killed. Sandes could no longer make herself useful as a nurse and was enrolled as a private by General Miloš Vasić. She quickly advanced to the rank of Corporal.[8] She recounted later that to formalize the change she removed her Red Cross badge and replaced it with the brass regimental figures from Colonel Milich's epaulettes.[12] In 1916, during the Serbian advance on Bitola (Monastir), Sandes was seriously wounded by a grenade in hand to hand combat.[8] She subsequently received the highest decoration of the Serbian Military, the Order of the Karađorđe's Star.[13][14] At the same time, she was promoted to the rank of Sergeant major.[10]

Also in 1916, Sandes published her autobiography, An English Woman-Sergeant in the Serbian Army, based on her letters and diaries. She used this account to help her raise funds for the Serbian Army,[15] and was compared with the writings for Dr Caroline Matthews 'Experiences of a Woman Doctor in Serbia'.[16] With Evelina Haverfield Sandes founded the Hon. Evelina Haverfield's and Sergt-Major Flora Sandes' Fund for Promoting Comforts for Serbian Soldiers and Prisoners.[17] Unable to continue fighting due to her injury, she spent the remainder of the war running a hospital.[18] In June 1919, a special Act of Parliament was passed in Serbia that made her the Serbian Army's first female commissioned officer.[19] She was finally demobilised in October 1922.[5][13]

Later life

In May 1927, Sandes married Yuri Yudenitch, a former Russian White Army general officer.[6] The couple lived for a time in France, but afterwards returned to Serbia (which had become part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia), and settled in Belgrade. Among other jobs, Sandes drove Belgrade's first taxicab. Also in 1927, she published a second autobiography. She lectured extensively on her wartime experiences in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, France, Canada and the United States. She wore her military uniform while delivering her lectures.[20]

When during World War II Germany launched its attack on Yugoslavia in April 1941, Sandes and Yudenitch were recalled to military service, but the invasion was over before they could take up any military duties. They were briefly interned by the Germans, before being released on parole.[13] Yudenitch fell ill, was removed to hospital, and died there in September 1941.[5]

Sandes subsequently returned to England. She spent the last years of her life in Suffolk, living at Lower Hacheston near Wickham Market. She died at the East Suffolk and Ipswich Hospital on 24 November 1956:[5][21] she was cremated at Ipswich Crematorium and her ashes scattered in the Garden of Remembrance.[22] In St Andrew's Church in Marlesford a memorial plaque on the south wall in the choir stalls is dedicated to her.[23]

Legacy

 
Sandes on a 2015 stamp of Serbia

In popular culture

  • Our Englishwoman, a television film based on the biography of Flora Sandes and directed by Slobodan Radovitch, was produced in 1997 by the Serbian broadcasting service RTS.[27][28]
  • The last track of the album England Green and England Grey by Reg Meuross is "The Ballad of Flora Sandes". It is an interpretation of her life.

See also

Bibliography

Autobiographies

  • Sandes, Flora (1916). An English Woman-Sergeant in the Serbian Army. London: Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Sandes, Flora (1927). The Autobiography of a Woman Soldier: A Brief Record of Adventure with the Serbian Army 1916–1919. London: H.F. & G. Witherby.

Other sources

  • Anon. (1 December 1956). "Obituary: Miss Flora Sandes: Combatant in Serbian Army". The Times. London. p. 8. (subscription required)
  • Burgess, Alan (1963). The Lovely Sergeant. London: Heinemann. OL 5847758M. (This work is based on Sandes' two autobiographies and other historical sources, but also includes imaginative dialogue and passages.)
  • Kitching, Paula (2013). "Four faces of nursing and the First World War". The Historian. 119: 30–35.
  • Lee, J. (2006). "A nurse and a soldier: gender, class and national identity in the First World War adventures of Grace McDougall and Flora Sandes". Women's History Review. 15 (1): 83–103. doi:10.1080/09612020500440903. S2CID 143789145.
  • MacMahon, Bryan (2005–2006). "Captain Flora Sandes of the Serbian Army". Irish Sword. 25: 419–436.
  • Miller, Louise (2012). A Fine Brother: the life of Captain Flora Sandes. Richmond, Surrey: Alma Books. ISBN 9781846881848.
  • Shipton, Elisabeth (2014). Female Tommies: the frontline women of the First World War. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 9780752491431.
  • Wheelwright, Julie (1989). "Flora Sandes: Military Maid". History Today. 39 (3): 42–48.
  • Wheelwright, Julie (1989). Amazons and Military Maids: women who dressed as men in the pursuit of life, liberty and happiness. London: Pandora. ISBN 0-04-440356-9. OL 3393908W.
  • Wheelwright, Julie (2004). "Yudenitch [Yudenich], Flora Sandes (1876–1956)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/49662. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

References

  1. ^ Allan Little (28 September 2018). "A forgotten soldier on a forgotten front". BBC.
  2. ^ Alison Fell (27 October 2014). "Viewpoint: Why are so few WW1 heroines remembered?". BBC News. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  3. ^ Medals of Flora Sandes 19 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine. velikirat.com
  4. ^ a b c d Taylor & Francis Group (2003). A Historical Dictionary of British Women. Routledge. p. 383. ISBN 1-85743-228-2.
  5. ^ a b c d e Wheelwright, Julie (2004). "Yudenitch, Flora Sandes (1876–1956)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/49662. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ a b Wheelwright, Julie (1989). Amazons and Military Maids. Pandora. ISBN 0-04-440356-9.
  7. ^ Twinch, Carol (2007). The Little Book of Suffolk. Breedon Books. ISBN 978-1-85983-587-6.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Hazen, Walter A. (2006). Everyday Life. Good Year Books. p. 61. ISBN 1-59647-074-7.
  9. ^ Allcock, John B.; Antonia Young (2000). Black Lambs & Grey Falcons: Women Travellers in the Balkans. Berghahn Books. p. 91. ISBN 9781571817440.
  10. ^ a b Jones, David E. (2000). Women Warriors: A History. Brassey's. p. 134. ISBN 1-57488-206-6.
  11. ^ Davies, Norman (1996). Europe: A History. Oxford University Press. pp. 908. ISBN 0-19-820171-0.
  12. ^ "Captain Flora Sandes: 'the Serbian Joan of Arc'". History Ireland. 13 March 2013. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  13. ^ a b c Condell, Diana; Jean Liddiard (1987). Working for Victory?: Images of Women in the First World War, 1914–18. Routledge. p. 41. ISBN 0-7102-0974-6.
  14. ^ "Wounded English Girl Wins Serbian Cross" (PDF). New York Times. 31 December 1916. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  15. ^ Smith, Angela K. (2000). The Second Battlefield: Women, Modernism and the First World War. Manchester University Press. p. 52. ISBN 0-7190-5301-3.
  16. ^ "British Women in Serbia - A Record of Grit and Endurance: English Girl Fighting in the Ranks - Doctor who Stayed with Wounded till Enemy Came". Yorkshire Evening Post. 28 September 1916. p. 4.
  17. ^ Crawford, Elizabeth (1999). The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide 1866–1928. Routledge. p. 280. ISBN 0-415-23926-5.
  18. ^ "History – Fact Files – Flora Sandes". BBC. 28 January 2005. Retrieved 30 March 2008.
  19. ^ "Woman and the Military during World War One". BBC History. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
  20. ^ Cromwell, Jason (1999). Transmen and FTMs: Identities, Bodies, Genders, and Sexualities. University of Illinois Press. p. 65. ISBN 0-252-06825-4.
  21. ^ Wills and Probates, England and Wales, year 1957.
  22. ^ "Suffolk: Brave Flora – the only woman to fight in the First World War". East Anglian Daily Times. Archant. 21 July 2012.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 December 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  24. ^ Shaw, Phyllida (2017). An Artist's War: the art and letters of Morris and Alice Meredith Williams. Stroud: History Press. p. 199. ISBN 9780750982382.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 June 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  26. ^ "Journey ends for Flora Sandes pub". Thornton Heath Chronicle. 2 May 2018. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  27. ^ Our Englishwoman on IMDB
  28. ^ Our Englishwoman on YouTube TV Drama

External links

  • Works by or about Flora Sandes at Internet Archive
  • Works by Flora Sandes at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Medical doctor and history, Documentary film - EAI

flora, sandes, serbian, cyrillic, Флора, Сендс, january, 1876, november, 1956, british, woman, served, member, royal, serbian, army, world, only, british, woman, officially, serve, soldier, that, initially, john, ambulance, volunteer, travelled, kingdom, serbi. Flora Sandes Serbian Cyrillic Flora Sends 22 January 1876 24 November 1956 was a British woman who served as a member of the Royal Serbian Army in World War I She was the only British woman officially to serve as a soldier in that war 1 Initially a St John Ambulance volunteer she travelled to the Kingdom of Serbia where she was welcomed and formally enrolled in the Serbian army She was subsequently promoted to the rank of Sergeant major and after the war to Captain 2 She was decorated with seven medals 3 Flora SandesSandes in Serbian Army uniform ca 1918Born22 January 1876Nether Poppleton Yorkshire EnglandDied24 November 1956 1956 11 24 aged 80 Suffolk EnglandAllegiance Kingdom of SerbiaService wbr branchSerbian ArmyYears of service1914 1922RankCaptainBattles warsWorld War I Battle of BitolaAwardsOrder of the Star of Karađorđe Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Military career 1 3 Later life 2 Legacy 3 In popular culture 4 See also 5 Bibliography 5 1 Autobiographies 5 2 Other sources 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Flora Sandes was born on 22 January 1876 in Nether Poppleton Yorkshire the youngest daughter of an Irish family Her father was Samuel Dickson Sandes 1822 1914 the former rector of Whitchurch County Cork and her mother was Sophia Julia nee Besnard 4 5 When she was nine years old the family moved to Marlesford Suffolk and later to Thornton Heath near Croydon Surrey 4 6 7 As a child she was educated by governesses 5 She enjoyed riding and shooting and said that she wished she had been born a boy 8 She learned to drive and drove an old French racing car 8 She took a job as a secretary 8 In her spare time Sandes trained with the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry FANY founded in 1907 as an all women mounted paramilitary organisation learning first aid horsemanship signalling and drill She left the FANY in 1910 joining another renegade Mabel St Clair Stobart in the formation of the Women s Sick and Wounded Convoy Corps The Convoy saw service in Serbia and Bulgaria in 1912 during the First Balkan War At the outbreak of the First World War in 1914 she volunteered to become a nurse but was rejected due to a lack of qualifications 9 Military career Edit Sandes nonetheless joined a St John Ambulance unit raised by American nurse Mabel Grouitch and on 12 August 1914 left England for Serbia with a group of 36 women to try to aid the humanitarian crises there 4 8 10 They arrived at the town of Kragujevac which was the base for the Serbian forces fighting against the Austro Hungarian offensive 11 Sandes joined the Serbian Red Cross and worked in an ambulance for the Serbian Army s 2nd Infantry Regiment 4 In 1914 she went riding with a Serbian soldier who impressed with her equestrian skills told her she was wasted as a nurse and should enlist as a soldier she told Dr Isabel Emslie I ve always wished to be a soldier and to fight citation needed In 1915 Sandes struggled persistently to get to the front despite the efforts of people such as the British Consul who instructed her to return to safety eventually joining the ambulance of the Second Regiment at the Babuna Pass During the Great Retreat through Albania all the other ambulance staff fled or were killed Sandes could no longer make herself useful as a nurse and was enrolled as a private by General Milos Vasic She quickly advanced to the rank of Corporal 8 She recounted later that to formalize the change she removed her Red Cross badge and replaced it with the brass regimental figures from Colonel Milich s epaulettes 12 In 1916 during the Serbian advance on Bitola Monastir Sandes was seriously wounded by a grenade in hand to hand combat 8 She subsequently received the highest decoration of the Serbian Military the Order of the Karađorđe s Star 13 14 At the same time she was promoted to the rank of Sergeant major 10 Also in 1916 Sandes published her autobiography An English Woman Sergeant in the Serbian Army based on her letters and diaries She used this account to help her raise funds for the Serbian Army 15 and was compared with the writings for Dr Caroline Matthews Experiences of a Woman Doctor in Serbia 16 With Evelina Haverfield Sandes founded the Hon Evelina Haverfield s and Sergt Major Flora Sandes Fund for Promoting Comforts for Serbian Soldiers and Prisoners 17 Unable to continue fighting due to her injury she spent the remainder of the war running a hospital 18 In June 1919 a special Act of Parliament was passed in Serbia that made her the Serbian Army s first female commissioned officer 19 She was finally demobilised in October 1922 5 13 Later life Edit In May 1927 Sandes married Yuri Yudenitch a former Russian White Army general officer 6 The couple lived for a time in France but afterwards returned to Serbia which had become part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and settled in Belgrade Among other jobs Sandes drove Belgrade s first taxicab Also in 1927 she published a second autobiography She lectured extensively on her wartime experiences in the United Kingdom Australia New Zealand France Canada and the United States She wore her military uniform while delivering her lectures 20 When during World War II Germany launched its attack on Yugoslavia in April 1941 Sandes and Yudenitch were recalled to military service but the invasion was over before they could take up any military duties They were briefly interned by the Germans before being released on parole 13 Yudenitch fell ill was removed to hospital and died there in September 1941 5 Sandes subsequently returned to England She spent the last years of her life in Suffolk living at Lower Hacheston near Wickham Market She died at the East Suffolk and Ipswich Hospital on 24 November 1956 5 21 she was cremated at Ipswich Crematorium and her ashes scattered in the Garden of Remembrance 22 In St Andrew s Church in Marlesford a memorial plaque on the south wall in the choir stalls is dedicated to her 23 Legacy Edit Sandes on a 2015 stamp of Serbia In 1920 the sculptor Alice Meredith Williams made a painted plaster model of Flora Sandes in action for the Imperial War Museum where it remains 24 In 2009 a street in Belgrade was named after her 25 There was formerly a Wetherspoon pub named The Flora Sandes in her honour in Thornton Heath It closed in 2018 26 In popular culture EditOur Englishwoman a television film based on the biography of Flora Sandes and directed by Slobodan Radovitch was produced in 1997 by the Serbian broadcasting service RTS 27 28 The last track of the album England Green and England Grey by Reg Meuross is The Ballad of Flora Sandes It is an interpretation of her life See also EditMilunka Savic Olive Kelso King Ecaterina Teodoroiu Maria Bochkareva Leslie Joy Whitehead Women in the military Emancipation of womenBibliography EditAutobiographies Edit Sandes Flora 1916 An English Woman Sergeant in the Serbian Army London Hodder amp Stoughton Sandes Flora 1927 The Autobiography of a Woman Soldier A Brief Record of Adventure with the Serbian Army 1916 1919 London H F amp G Witherby Other sources Edit Anon 1 December 1956 Obituary Miss Flora Sandes Combatant in Serbian Army The Times London p 8 subscription required Burgess Alan 1963 The Lovely Sergeant London Heinemann OL 5847758M This work is based on Sandes two autobiographies and other historical sources but also includes imaginative dialogue and passages Kitching Paula 2013 Four faces of nursing and the First World War The Historian 119 30 35 Lee J 2006 A nurse and a soldier gender class and national identity in the First World War adventures of Grace McDougall and Flora Sandes Women s History Review 15 1 83 103 doi 10 1080 09612020500440903 S2CID 143789145 MacMahon Bryan 2005 2006 Captain Flora Sandes of the Serbian Army Irish Sword 25 419 436 Miller Louise 2012 A Fine Brother the life of Captain Flora Sandes Richmond Surrey Alma Books ISBN 9781846881848 Shipton Elisabeth 2014 Female Tommies the frontline women of the First World War Stroud The History Press ISBN 9780752491431 Wheelwright Julie 1989 Flora Sandes Military Maid History Today 39 3 42 48 Wheelwright Julie 1989 Amazons and Military Maids women who dressed as men in the pursuit of life liberty and happiness London Pandora ISBN 0 04 440356 9 OL 3393908W Wheelwright Julie 2004 Yudenitch Yudenich Flora Sandes 1876 1956 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49662 Subscription or UK public library membership required References Edit Allan Little 28 September 2018 A forgotten soldier on a forgotten front BBC Alison Fell 27 October 2014 Viewpoint Why are so few WW1 heroines remembered BBC News Retrieved 27 October 2014 Medals of Flora Sandes Archived 19 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine velikirat com a b c d Taylor amp Francis Group 2003 A Historical Dictionary of British Women Routledge p 383 ISBN 1 85743 228 2 a b c d e Wheelwright Julie 2004 Yudenitch Flora Sandes 1876 1956 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49662 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Wheelwright Julie 1989 Amazons and Military Maids Pandora ISBN 0 04 440356 9 Twinch Carol 2007 The Little Book of Suffolk Breedon Books ISBN 978 1 85983 587 6 a b c d e f Hazen Walter A 2006 Everyday Life Good Year Books p 61 ISBN 1 59647 074 7 Allcock John B Antonia Young 2000 Black Lambs amp Grey Falcons Women Travellers in the Balkans Berghahn Books p 91 ISBN 9781571817440 a b Jones David E 2000 Women Warriors A History Brassey s p 134 ISBN 1 57488 206 6 Davies Norman 1996 Europe A History Oxford University Press pp 908 ISBN 0 19 820171 0 Captain Flora Sandes the Serbian Joan of Arc History Ireland 13 March 2013 Retrieved 29 September 2018 a b c Condell Diana Jean Liddiard 1987 Working for Victory Images of Women in the First World War 1914 18 Routledge p 41 ISBN 0 7102 0974 6 Wounded English Girl Wins Serbian Cross PDF New York Times 31 December 1916 Retrieved 6 February 2022 Smith Angela K 2000 The Second Battlefield Women Modernism and the First World War Manchester University Press p 52 ISBN 0 7190 5301 3 British Women in Serbia A Record of Grit and Endurance English Girl Fighting in the Ranks Doctor who Stayed with Wounded till Enemy Came Yorkshire Evening Post 28 September 1916 p 4 Crawford Elizabeth 1999 The Women s Suffrage Movement A Reference Guide 1866 1928 Routledge p 280 ISBN 0 415 23926 5 History Fact Files Flora Sandes BBC 28 January 2005 Retrieved 30 March 2008 Woman and the Military during World War One BBC History Retrieved 2 February 2022 Cromwell Jason 1999 Transmen and FTMs Identities Bodies Genders and Sexualities University of Illinois Press p 65 ISBN 0 252 06825 4 Wills and Probates England and Wales year 1957 Suffolk Brave Flora the only woman to fight in the First World War East Anglian Daily Times Archant 21 July 2012 Archived copy Archived from the original on 1 December 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Shaw Phyllida 2017 An Artist s War the art and letters of Morris and Alice Meredith Williams Stroud History Press p 199 ISBN 9780750982382 British Nurses in Serbia 1915 Scottish Women s Hospitals Archived from the original on 25 June 2018 Retrieved 13 June 2016 Journey ends for Flora Sandes pub Thornton Heath Chronicle 2 May 2018 Retrieved 30 September 2018 Our Englishwoman on IMDB Our Englishwoman on YouTube TV DramaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flora Sandes Works by or about Flora Sandes at Internet Archive Works by Flora Sandes at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Medical doctor and history Documentary film EAI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flora Sandes amp oldid 1127380330, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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