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ANZAC Q&A - What was a field ambulance?

ANZAC Q&A - What was a field ambulance?

Military Shop
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Image: 4th Australian Field Ambulance hospital tents under snow in Hotchkiss Gully after the blizzards of November 1915. Hotchkiss Gully lay between steep hills at the northern end of the Anzac position.
 

Q.   What was a field ambulance?
A.   Each infantry and light horse brigade had attached to it a medical unit known as a "field ambulance"; the AIF eventually fielded 15 field ambulances and four light horse field ambulances. Theoretically, the field ambulance was the first stop in the medical chain after a wounded or sick man was evacuated from his unit. A standard ‘infantry’ field ambulance had a strength of 10 officers and 224 other ranks and was divided into three sections; A Section was the ‘hospital’ section, responsible for setting up the nursing facility, while B and C were the ‘bearer’ sections. The latter had the capability of operating independently and could be sub-divided into a ‘Tent Sub-Section’ and a ‘Bearer Sub-Section’.  A light horse field ambulance was considerably smaller at 118 all ranks and divided into two sections, a ‘Mobile Section’ and in ‘Immobile Section’.

This and other trivia questions are included in our best selling Great War Educards

Help pass the Anzac legend to the next generation with our fun educards. These questions and answers were created with the help of noted Australian military historian Graham Wilson.

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