THE FOURTH FIELD AMBULANCE
Shortly after the outbreak of War after
the first contingent had been mobilised, and while
they were undergoing training it became
evident that it would be necessary to raise another
force to proceed on the heels of the first. Three
Infantry Brigades with their Ambulances had already
been formed; orders for a fourth were now issued, and
naturally the Ambulance would be designated Fourth
Field Ambulance.
The Fourth Brigade was composed of
the 13th Battalion (N.S.W.), 14th (Victoria), 15th
(Queensland) and 16th (Western Australia) commanded
respectively by Lieutenant-Colonel Burnage, Lieutenant-Colonel
Courtnay, Lieutenant-Colonel Cannon and Lieutenant-Colonel
Pope. The Brigade was in charge of Colonel Monash,
V.D., with Lieutenant-Colonel McGlinn as his Brigade
Major.
As it will be necessary from time
to time to allude to the component parts of the Ambulance,
it may be as well to describe how an ambulance is
made up. It is composed of three sections, known
as A, B, and C, the total of all ranks being 254 on
a war strength. It is subdivided into Bearer,
Tent and Transport Divisions. Each section has
its own officers, and is capable of acting independently.
Where there is an extended front, it is frequently
desirable to detach sections and send them to positions
where the work is heaviest.
As the name implies, the Bearers convey
the wounded to the dressing station (or Field Hospital,
as the case may be). Those in the Tent Division
dress the cases and perform nursing duties, while the
Transport Division undertakes their conveyance to Base
Hospital.
It was decided to recruit the Fourth
Field Ambulance from three States, A Section from
Victoria, B from South Australia, C from Western Australia.
Recruiting started in Broadmeadows, Victoria, on the
19th October, 1914, and thirty men enrolled from New
South Wales were included in A Section. Towards
the end of November B Section from South Australia
joined us, and participated in the training. On
the 22nd December we embarked on a transport forming
one of a convoy of eighteen ships. The nineteenth
ship joined after we left Albany.
Details from the Ambulance were supplied
to different ships and the officers distributed among
the fleet. Our last port in Australia was Albany,
which was cleared on the last day of 1914 a
beautiful night and clear day, with the sea as smooth
as the proverbial glass.