![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | John Williams/Fielding VC Headstone | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
Peter Ewart
Joined: 31 Aug 2005 |
Posts: 1797 |
Location: Near Canterbury, Kent, England. |
|
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |
Posted: Thu Apr 18, 2013 7:34 pm |
|
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/posttop_left.gif) |
![Reply with quote Reply with quote](templates/Morpheus/images/lang_english/blue/icon_quote.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |
Colin
It's a remarkabe coincidence that your great-grandfather lies in the churchyard of St Michael & All Angels there, because the four Sisters who nursed him through his long period of illness with enteric fever at Ladysmith, were all from the Anglican mission of St Michael & All Angels at Bloemfontein in the Orange Free State, the ladies having been asked to make the tough journey from the OFS to Natal to bolster the overstretched makeshift hospital in April, where they remained for four months.
I can't see a reference to his illness during a quick flick through W. G Lloyd's book, but may have missed it. He and Pte Luddington, both RD hospital defenders, were the two worst cases among the 80 sick patients there, having gone down with fever in the awful conditions at RD after the fight. He was suffering badly at Ladysmith, occupying one of the two air beds available, when news came through of his VC. He described one of his narrow escapes in the fight to Mother Superior.
I only came across this account, originally appearing in an obscure contemporary missionary journal, last week, and read it in detail only today, noticing the coincidence between the dedications of both Llantarnam church and the Bloemfontein Mission just a few minutes ago. Given the odds of this, I thought it rather poignant that the devoted women who saved his life in 1879 would have approved of his last resting place 53 years later! If any of this is new to you I can always fill in a bit more and quote the source.
Hope the ceremony goes really well.
Peter
|
|
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
Peter Ewart
Joined: 31 Aug 2005 |
Posts: 1797 |
Location: Near Canterbury, Kent, England. |
|
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |
Posted: Fri Apr 19, 2013 8:52 pm |
|
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/posttop_left.gif) |
![Reply with quote Reply with quote](templates/Morpheus/images/lang_english/blue/icon_quote.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |
Following my previous post, I�ve spent a few minutes this evening checking a few of the more relevant AZW publications which offer a little biographical detail on Pte John Williams (Fielding) VC and was surprised to see no reference at all to his lengthy sojourn in the hospital at Ladysmith. It eventually occurred to me that, despite this chap�s life and career being the subject of considerable attention and research for obvious reasons over the years � including a published monograph - it may be that his post-22nd January travails during the AZW were previously unknown? I suppose that�s perfectly possible if none of the obvious published sources mentions he was invalided to Ladysmith, whereas sick officers sent there such as Chard, Smith-Dorrien, Dunne, Rev G Smith etc are known about from various reports and accounts. Still, given that Lloyd and Holme (both in the SW & N24) appear to have collated certain of his personal info from WO97, such as his numerous misdemeanours between 1878 & 1882, I�d have expected any long term hospitalisation to have appeared in the usual way. (Unless not much of his WO97 papers have survived and the defaulter material was culled from charge sheets in regimental archives at Brecon?)
Anyway, no matter. If � as his biography appears to suggest � it was believed he had languished at Rorke�s Drift with his mates during those interminablly dreary months of fatigues for �B� Coy after January, then the following will clear that up:
The Bloemfontein Quarterly mission journal (probably the third quarter issue of 1879) carried a lengthy account of the efforts made by three Sisters at the Ladysmith hospital, who had travelled from their OFS mission (where they�d been nursing their Diamond Mine fever patients) to Natal at the request of Dr Woolfryes, the senior medical officer in Natal. Sister Louise (Mother Superior), Miss Potts & Miss Longlands (a sister & lady helper) left at Easter in mid-April and found at Ladysmith around 80 patients (all sick, no wounded) and an �overworked� doctor, a hospital sergeant & four orderlies. Describing the premises (Dutch church plus four tents) the equipment and procedures - all primitive - they changed and improved much immediately, so that the sick & dying men at least didn�t starve or lack other comforts. A description of the very basic hospital beds (simple, raised planks) continued:
"Two air beds were used for the patients most in need of them. These were two very long and tedious cases of enteric fever contracted at Rorke�s Drift. They both recovered eventually, and we had the pleasure of congratulating one of them on becoming a Victoria Cross man. He was a young Welshman named Williams, a private in the 24th, and he received the Victoria Cross for so gallantly defending the hospital at Rorke�s Drift against the Zulus. They came to such close quarters on this occasion that one of the enemy snatched the bayonet off Williams� rifle and aimed it at his head, which he happily missed."
The other patient was Pte Luddington, Army Hospital Corps, another Rorke�s Drift defender with fever. He didn�t leave until 29 July because they used him as an orderly there after his recovery, but although the dates of Williams� admission & discharge aren�t given by Mother Superior, it seems clear he was there when they arrived in April and may have been there since February or March. From the wording of the account I think it likely he was still there in May and may not have left until June at least, when some hopeless cases were brought in from the Field Hospital at Dundee. Later, they treated gunshot wounds in Ulundi casualties. On one night when Williams was there, they were warned about a possible attack by Zulus and spent all night laagering the place, utilising some Gatling guns on the way to the front, but of course no attack came. The ladies returned to the OFS when replacements arrived from Netley about August. Given the number of officers and men who died at Rorke�s Drift and Helpmekaar where precious few medical supplies remained after 22nd January, and at Dundee and Ladysmith where supplies were more adequate, as well as the hundreds who hovered between life and death for weeks and, in some cases, months, Pte Williams VC might just have viewed his dangerous few hours at Rorke�s Drift as a piece of cake (or perhaps a short, sharp shock) compared with his lingering suffering at Ladysmith, where the round-the-clock devotion by the three intrepid ladies from the St Michael & All Angels mission at Bloemfontein helped him to � just about - pull through.
P.
|
|
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/ftr_right.gif) |
![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_left_post.gif) | | ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/blue/hdr_right_blue.gif) |
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
All times are GMT
Page 1 of 2
|
|
|
| ![](./templates/Morpheus/images/spacer.gif) |