One of the books I have currently
unearthed is a slim volume on The Dutiful Edith Cavell. In fact, it was finding both books, the one on Bruges in World War One and this Cavell story, which made the connection in my mind. In fact, Edith Cavell was a name from my childhood when her story featured prominently in my beloved Girls' Book of Heroines. I was
thrilled and horrified as a little girl with Edith’s story, often re-told by my mother, born in 1902, and I went, in adulthood, to find her final grave outside the East end of Norwich Cathedral. She had been born nearby, in Swardeston, daughter of the rector there, on December 4, 1865 and fought hard to become a professional nurse, not then a socially acceptable job for a girl of her class. She began her training in 1895 as a probationer nurse at the London Hospital and worked in a number of London hospitals holding increasingly important jobs such as staff nurse, Night Superintendent, Assistant Superintendent, Acting Matron [Manchester] and gaining a reputation as a teacher of nursing.
thrilled and horrified as a little girl with Edith’s story, often re-told by my mother, born in 1902, and I went, in adulthood, to find her final grave outside the East end of Norwich Cathedral. She had been born nearby, in Swardeston, daughter of the rector there, on December 4, 1865 and fought hard to become a professional nurse, not then a socially acceptable job for a girl of her class. She began her training in 1895 as a probationer nurse at the London Hospital and worked in a number of London hospitals holding increasingly important jobs such as staff nurse, Night Superintendent, Assistant Superintendent, Acting Matron [Manchester] and gaining a reputation as a teacher of nursing.
Edith with students, |
Princesse Marie de Croy |
organised escape to Holland, of foreign soldiers in hiding in occupied Belgium. Quite soon after its formation, one of those involved asked Edith Cavell if she could consider hiding two fugitive British soldiers and she immediately agreed, thus becoming an important link in the chain of escape. Eventually, one of the ostensible escapees, a German agent, betrayed her and several others and all were arrested, accused of treason. Had the escapees been civilians, the charge would have been less severe but helping soldiers escape [in her case, over 200 men] thus enabling them to fight again, could only be treason, with death as the only penalty. No written evidence against Edith was found but she admitted everything to her German captors after they told her, untruthfully, that others had all confessed and supplied details. Of the thirty five arrested, only five were executed.
Enlistment poster. |
‘Whosoever knowingly aids, in any manner whatsoever, such a
person,[a person who has wished to aid an enemy of Germany] in
concealing his presence, whether by giving him lodging,
by clothing him, or by giving him nourishment, is liable to the same
punishment. [death]’
Though retrospective, this gave, from the German point of view, a
semblance of justice and administrative tidiness.
Edith's grave in Life's Green, Norwich Cathedral. |
The German authorities refused to
return her body to England and so she
was buried near the prison at
Saint
Gilles in Brussels but after the war, her
body was exhumed and returned
to England
for a huge service at St Paul’s in London attended both by Royalty
and members of the Government. Crowds lined the route from Dover to
St Paul’s and after the service, as the cortege journeyed to
Norwich Cathedral, many thousands more paid their respects. Her
burial, outside the East End of the Cathedral in the grass-covered
Life’s Green, took place on May 15, 1919. Her
family had chosen this burial site near the place of her birth, in
preference to the honour of burial in Westminster Abbey, A
curiously fitting tribute to a woman who never sought glory. And it is worth remembering that Anna de Beir chiefly owed her life to the world-wide scandal caused by the execution of Edith Cavell.
curiously fitting tribute to a woman who never sought glory. And it is worth remembering that Anna de Beir chiefly owed her life to the world-wide scandal caused by the execution of Edith Cavell.
London Memorial. |
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