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  • World War I: an R.A.M.C. bearer supplying water to the front line. Oil painting by H.R. Mackey.
  • World War I: auxiliaries bringing stretchers, splints, rations and water for the Line. Oil painting by H.R. Mackey, ca. 1918.
  • World War I: an R.A.M.C. bearer supplying water to the front line. Oil painting by H.R. Mackey.
  • World War I: an R.A.M.C. bearer supplying water to the front line. Oil painting by H.R. Mackey.
  • World War I: an R.A.M.C. bearer supplying water to the front line. Oil painting by H.R. Mackey.
  • World War I: auxiliaries bringing stretchers, splints, rations and water for the Line. Oil painting by H.R. Mackey, ca. 1918.
  • Nottingham: soldiers in World War I, some of them wounded, standing on a verandah used for open-air treatment. Photograph, 1917.
  • Manufacture of artificial limbs in Glasgow for Scottish servicemen injured in World War I. Photograph album by Yarrow & Co. Ltd.
  • World War I: lung tissue damaged by mustard gas poisoning: microscopic section. Colour halftone after A.K. Maxwell, ca. 1917 (?).
  • World War I: auxiliaries bringing stretchers, splints, rations and water for the Line. Oil painting by H.R. Mackey, ca. 1918.
  • A French hospital for wounded soldiers, World War I: one patient has his leg dressed, another gets injected and two nurses roll a bandage. Colour lithograph after L. Ibels, 1916.
  • A French hospital for wounded soldiers, World War I: 8.30 am, nurses arrive for work in the rain, then change into their uniforms. Colour lithograph after L. Ibels, 1916.
  • World War I: a poisonous gas attack on the Canadians in Flanders, 24 April 1915. Coloured chalks by Louis Raemaekers. ca. 1918.
  • Military Hospital V.R. 76, Ris-Orangis, France: man with leg in traction, wounded at Verdun in World War I. Photograph, 1916.
  • World War I: a mess table fitted as an inclined plane for sliding stretchers. Oil painting by Godfrey Jervis Gordon ("Jan Gordon").
  • World War I: Trinity College Cambridge, the Lime Walk, during occupation by the 1st Eastern General Hospital. Watercolour by Walter Spradbery.
  • A French hospital for wounded soldiers, World War I: in the afternoon, nurses massage a patient, apply electrical muscle stimulation, knit and chat. Colour and coloured lithograph after L. Ibels, 1916.
  • A French hospital for wounded soldiers, World War I: two nurses have lunch at a patisserie, the others have a drunken meal at the hospital. Colour lithograph after L. Ibels, 1916.
  • A French hospital for wounded soldiers, World War I: a ward, with a timetable for the day. Colour lithograph after L. Ibels, 1916.
  • British ambulance wagon used in the Sudan during World War I: view of the back of the vehicle, showing the interior. Photograph, 1915/1918.
  • A French hospital for wounded soldiers, World War I: patients engaged in reading, writing, playing cards, etc. Coloured lithograph after L. Ibels, 1916.
  • World War I: the face of a soldier suffering from the effects of phosgene gas poisoning. Pastel by A.K. Maxwell, ca. 1915.
  • World War I: Trinity College Cambridge, Neville's Court, occupied by wards of the 1st Eastern General Hospital. Watercolour by Walter Spradbery, 1914.
  • Military Hospital V.R. 76, Ris-Orangis, France: soldier with amputation following leg wound, after fighting at Verdun in World War I. Photograph, 1916.
  • World War I: a hospital ship showing lift for transferring wounded sailors from deck to deck. Oil painting by Godfrey Jervis Gordon ("Jan Gordon").
  • World War I: a hospital ship showing lift for transferring wounded sailors from deck to deck. Oil painting by Godfrey Jervis Gordon ("Jan Gordon").
  • World War I: dressing station orderlies carrying the wounded at a front line dressing station, Villers Bretonneux, 20 April 1918. Gouache by A. Forestier.
  • World War One: convalescent Indian soldiers with British military medics and a nurse in a ward in the Royal Pavilion, Brighton. Photograph, 1914/1918.
  • The altruism of a soldier killed in World War I compared to the death of Christ on the cross. Colour process print after J. Clark, 1914.
  • A French hospital for wounded soldiers, World War I: patients receiving women visitors, but a black soldier has no visitor. Colour lithograph after L. Ibels, 1916.