Police have identified 19 suspects in the long-running investigation into hundreds of opioid deaths at a Hampshire hospital. It isthought more than 450 people hadtheir lives cut short at Gosport War Memorial Hospital by the drugs, with another 200 "probably" given simila...
The Gosport War Memorial Hospital Panel report and its implications for nursingdoi:10.1111/JAN.13781Philip DarbyshireRobin IonJohn Wiley & Sons, Ltd
Rumor was about all the average American had to go on because there was no pattern when it came to the units first sent home. The men of the 36th Division were told by their commander that they would be among the last divisions sent home, though that did not turn out to be true. ...
was unhappily himself shot dead through the head. His loss to us personally, and to us as a regiment, I cannot yet realise. He was such a fine stamp of Christian soldier, and we looked on him as one likely to go a very long way.” ...
, F.R.C.S., Surgeon, Gosport War Memorial Hospital, etc. Second edition (formerly “Mistakes and Accidents of Surgery”). Demy 8vo. Pp. 525 + x. 1925. London: Baillière, Tindall & Cox. 12s. 6d. net. Br J Surg, 13: 765. doi: 10.1002/bjs.1800135227 Publication History Issue ...
…and the German soldiers go down every time. He storms a German machine gun nest and kills a bunch of them saying “bangity-bang-bang!” Then one charges at him. He doesn’t know what else to do so he points the end of the broom-stick at him and yells; “stabbity-stab-stab!”...
“The bandits intended to go abroad. Precisely to the territory of Ukraine. According to our preliminary operational information, they were expected there,” he told Zarubin, in an interview posted in Russian on hisTelegram channel. — Holly Ellyatt ...
The town was ill equipped to deal with such a serious raid and it was only days later when rubble had been cleared that it became clear that 20 civilians had died and over 200 injured, seven more would die in hospital due to their injuries. This attack was one of the worst of many ...
near to the borders with Nepal, Tibet, and Bhutan. He arrived back in the UK on 9 November 1907 and was transferred to the army reserve at Gosport. He completed his first period of engagement on 3 October 1911, having completed 12 years’ service, which included...
But perhaps the most extraordinary picture is a portrait of a soldier in the Hampshire regiment, a photograph taken in Gosport and signed simply 'Paul'. We know nothing more about him. He is an ordinary private, one of hundreds of thousands of men who joined up and were prepared to pay...