Those who remained in Cheltenham provided great support to the war effort by organising fundraising events and knitting items for the troops abroad. Many women had signed up to the scheme for the Organisation of Voluntary Aid which was set up in 1909 to provide additional aid to the medical services in times of war. These women became voluntary nurses at hospitals that were set up at houses and schools across Cheltenham. The Racecourse was even used as a VAD hospital, as they were known, where the buildings were used and temporary structures build in the Paddock area. These hospitals received patients from a variety of nationalities including Canadian, Belgian and New Zealanders. The museum has two books from these hospitals where the soldiers wrote their names and messages. The first hospital to open was New Court Hospital on Landsdown Road, which was given only 12 hours’ notice to open and be ready for casualties coming from Belgium. Nursing courses were provided at the Town Hall and the Technical School, St Margaret’s Road.

The Ladies’ College provided its students with nursing training with all pupils required to take first aid and nursing exams, and by 1914 400 pupils held nursing certificates. They would be taught to correctly carry stretchers and to set up outdoor kitchens to prepare for nursing on the front lines. Many girls would volunteer to one of the VAD hospitals in Cheltenham, likely their own Eversleigh boarding house which became a hospital in 1915. One of the classrooms was turned into an operating theatre and the labs were used to make anaesthetics for the Royal Society War Committee. The college also held plays and other entertainments, the proceeds of which would go to the war effort.

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