Sligo: The People's Ambulance
Sligo, on the west coast of Ireland, is nearly a thousand miles away from the battlefields of France but local people felt they needed to help out nonetheless. In 1915, a group of them decided to raise funds for an ambulance which would be sent to the front.
In the space of two weeks, they collected £458 – a vast sum of money for a small town in those days. They bought the ambulance and adorned it with a plaque saying: “Presented by the Town and County of Sligo, Ireland”. The local paper carried a photograph of the vehicle before it was dispatched to France.
Meanwhile, two local women drove ambulances – and even ammunition trucks – at the front. One of them was Richard Wood-Martin’s aunt, Kathleen. She served in France until close to the end of the war and became a doctor when she returned to Ireland. Kathleen died on Remembrance Sunday 1935.
Richard Wood-Martin remembers his aunt Kathleen, together with historian Hugh Trayor.
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