Service chevrons : Sister A M Locke, Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve

Places
Accession Number REL35877
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Uniform
Physical description Cotton, Wool
Maker Unknown
Date made c 1915-1919
Conflict Period 1910-1919
First World War, 1914-1918
Description

Five blue and one red chevrons. The top four chevrons are all machine embroidered onto a single piece of khaki woollen fabric, while the bottom blue chevron and the red chevron have been machine embroidered onto other pieces of similar fabric. They have been attached to the other chevrons with white thread.

History / Summary

Five blue and one red service chevrons, each chevron denoting one year's service. The red chevron denotes service before 31 December 1914 and the blue chevrons denote service from 1 January 1915. Associated with Annie Maria Locke, born in the Goulburn district of New South Wales in 1872. Sister Locke had completed her training and was already working as a nurse in the United Kingdom when the war broke out. She joined Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve (QAIMNSR) in 1914 and worked in both Britain and France. Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service (QAIMNS) was established in 1902, replacing the Army Nursing Service in Great Britain. At the outbreak of the First World War there were 297 nurses in QAIMNS. This small number in the core service was maintained throughout the war, being supplemented by the approximately 11,000 nurses who enrolled in QAIMNSR. The women of QAIMNSR were employed on annual contracts, or until their services were no longer required. Women who joined QAIMNS or QAIMNSR were generally over 25 years old and single (although as the war progressed some younger or married women were able to join). They had to be well educated, of good social standing and to have completed a three year course of nurse training in a War Office approved hospital. Sister Locke took up a position as an instructor at the Royal Infirmary Edinburgh School of Nursing after the war, and later returned to Australia.