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medal, campaign

On display
human history
  • Other Name

    Victory Medal 1914-19, WW1 (descriptive name)

    22/3 Matron Vida Mary K Maclean, NZANS (associated name)

  • Description

    Victory Medal 1914-18, WW1

    Medal (part of set) awarded to Matron Vida MK MacLean, New Zealand Army Nursing Service, NZEF

    bronze circular medal, 36mm diameter, ring suspender, with ribbon

    obverse: The winged, full-length figure of Victory, with her arm extended and holding a palm branch in her right hand.

    reverse: inscription ‘THE GREAT WAR FOR CIVILIZATION, 1914-1919’ surrounded by a wreath.

    named on edge: 22/3 MATRON V.M.K. MCLEAN N.Z.E.F. [note different spelling]

    ribbon: grosgrain ribbon, 37mm wide, rainbow pattern.

  • Place
  • Associated Place
  • Accession Number
    2001.25.616.4
  • Accession Date
    15 Aug 2001
  • Other Id

    Spink: 146 (Spink 1988)

  • Department
  • Display Room
medal, campaign, 2001.25.616.4, Spink: 146, Photographed by… … Read more

Images and documents

Images

Artefact

  • Display location

    Pou Maumahara drawer bank 7, drawer G, medal position 14

  • Credit Line
    Collection of Auckland Museum Tamaki Paenga Hira, 2001.25.616.4
    Brent Mackrell Collection
  • Collection
  • Primary Maker

     William McMillan (Medallist)

  • Place
  • Date
    [1919]
  • Associated Notes

    Victory Medal 1914-18

    22/3 Matron Vida Mary K MacLean, NZANS

    Served: WW1: Samoa, Egypt, England.

    Post-War: Matron Plunket Society

    WW2: Indian Military Nursing Service, Burma Campaign 1942-46

    Awards: RRC, ARRC, MID

    Vida Mary Katie MacLean left Wellington for Samoa on 15 August 1914 with five other nurses as members of the Expeditionary Force Advance Party. The NZANS had not been established at that time so the nurses were attached to the New Zealand Medical Corps (NZMC) as New Zealand Army Nursing Service Reserve (NZANSR) and were issued with service numbers which were later replaced with NZANS numbers.

    MacLean Returned to New Zealand to join the first contingent of 50 nurses to leave for Europe, in April 1915 on board SS Rotorua. Initially posted to Egypt, MacLean took charge of the isolation block at the 300-bed New Zealand base hospital in Cairo.

    She was transferred to England in June 1916 where she became matron of the New Zealand Convalescent Hospital at Hornchurch in January 1917 and then of the No.1 New Zealand General Hospital at Brockenhurst in April. Both hospitals were huge. Hornchurch had over 1000 beds, while Brockenhurst held over 1500, and at peak use during 1918 cared for more than 1600 injured & sick New Zealand soldiers. During the war she was twice mentioned in despatches (MID).

    In 1925, MacLean became active in Plunket, taking the work to India in 1938 where she was to open a Mothercraft Clinic in Calcutta. WW2 intervened, during which she served with the Indian Military Nursing service. The clinic, the Truby King Mothercraft Centre, was opened in 1948 and MacLean became first matron.

    MacLean Returned to NZ in 1955 aged 73.She died in Wanganui in April 1970.

    NB: From Te Ara and from While You're Away: New Zealand Nurses at War 1899-1948 by Anna Rogers

  • Associated Event
    WW1; 1914-1918
  • Associated Person
  • Associated Place
  • Associated Date
    1914-1919
  • Period
  • Media
  • Measurement Description
    medal: 36mm diameter
    ribbon: 37mm wide
  • Measurement Reading

    36mm (medal)

    37mm (ribbon)

  • Subject Category
  • Classification
  • Last Update
    19 Mar 2024
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