Queenie Sunderland as a WW1 British war bride, interviewed by Peter Rubinstein for "Voices From the Great War".

Accession Number S03442
Collection type Sound
Measurement 43 min 18 sec
Object type Oral history
Physical description digital audio tape (DAT); AMPEX 467 R-48; 48kHz; 16 bit; mono
Maker Sunderland, Queenie
Rubinstein, Peter
Date made 7 October 1998
Access Onsite use only
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright

Item copyright: AWM Licensed copyright

Copying Provisions Copyright restrictions apply. Permission of copyright holder required for any use and/or reproduction.
Source credit to Department of Veterans' Affairs. Their Service - Our Heritage
Description

Queenie talks about her early life in England, working while at Salisbury Station (UK) near the military camp (Larkhill) and there meeting her Australian husband-to-be, Edward Henry Sunderland, a Gunner. She recalls seeing Lord Kitchener on the train platform at Salisbury; her memories of Armistice Day in Salisbury, accompanying her husband to Australia on the troop ship Osterly; staying up at 4am to see the Southern Cross for the first time as they voyaged to Australia; restrictions and friendships on board, return of "abandoned brides" to England, being labelled as a "Pommy bride", adjusting to life on a rural property in Australia; her husband's suffering from carbuncles (attributed to mustard gas in the Great War); her husband's briefly assisting an injured man onto the back of Simpson's donkey; other incidents at Gallipoli such as being on guard duty, encountering a Turkish soldier on guard duty; burying a Turkish soldier's corpse.
A transcript of this recording may be available. For further information please contact the Sound section.

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