A LIST OF SOME OF THE BOOKS CONSULTED
In case any of my readers wish to read further for themselves:—
Kinglake’s Invasion of the Crimea. (William Blackwood.)
Memoir of Sidney Herbert, by Lord Stanmore. (John Murray.)
Life of Sir Bartle Frere, by John Martineau. (John Murray.)
Letters of John Stuart Mill, edited by John Elliot. (Longmans.)
William Rathbone, a Memoir by Eleanor F. Rathbone. (Macmillan.)
The Life of Florence Nightingale, by Sarah Tooley. (Cassell.)
Felicia Skene of Oxford, by E. C. Rickards. (John Murray.)
Memoir of Sir John MacNeill, G.C.B., by his Granddaughter. (John Murray.)
Agnes Elizabeth Jones, by her Sister. (Alexander Strahan.)
A History of Nursing, by M. Adelaide Nutting, R.N., and Lavinia L. Dock, R.N. (G. P. Putnam and Sons.)
A Sister of Mercy’s Memories of the Crimea, by Sister Aloysius. (Burns and Oates.)
The Story of Florence Nightingale, by W. I. W. (Pilgrim Press.)
Soyer’s Culinary Campaign, by Alexis Soyer. (Routledge.)
Kaiserswerth, by Florence Nightingale.
Florence Nightingale, a Cameo Life-Sketch by Marion Holmes. (Women’s Freedom League.)
Paterson’s Roads, edited by Edward Mogg. (Longmans, Green, Orme.)
The London Library, No. 3, vol. of The Times for 1910.
Nursing Notes, by Florence Nightingale, and other writings of Miss Nightingale included in the foregoing list.
A BRIEF SKETCH OF GENERAL EVATT’S CAREER.
[As given in Who’s Who.]
Evatt, Surgeon-General George Joseph Hamilton, C.B., 1903; M.D., R.A.M.C.; retired; Member, Council British Medical Association, 1904; born, 11th Nov. 1843; son of Captain George Evatt, 70th Foot; married, 1877, Sophie Mary Frances, daughter of William Walter Raleigh Kerr, Treasurer of Mauritius, and granddaughter of Lord Robert Kerr; one son, one daughter. Educated, Royal College of Surgeons, and Trinity College, Dublin. Entered Army Medical Service, 1865; joined 25th (K.O.S.B.) Regiment, 1866; Surgeon-Major, 1877; Lieutenant-Colonel, R.A.M.C., 1885; Colonel, 1896; Surgeon-General, 1899; served Perak Expedition with Sir H. Ross’s Bengal Column, 1876 (medal and clasp); Afghan War, 1878-80; capture of Ali Musjid (despatches); action in Bazaar Valley, with General Tytler’s Column (despatches); advance on Gundamak, and return in “Death March,” 1879 (specially thanked in General Orders by Viceroy of India in Council and Commander-in-Chief in India for services); commanded Field Hospital in second campaign, including advance to relief of Cabul under General Sir Charles Gough, 1879; action on the Ghuzni Road; return to India, 1880 (medal and two clasps); Suakin Expedition, 1885, including actions at Handoub, Tamai, and removal of wounded from MacNeill’s zareba (despatches, medal and clasp, Khedive’s Star); Zhob Valley Expedition, 1890; commanded a Field Hospital (despatches); Medical Officer, Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, 1880-96; Senior Medical Officer, Quetta Garrison, Baluchistan, 1887-91; Sanitary Officer, Woolwich Garrison, 1892-94; Secretary, Royal Victoria Hospital, Netley, 1894-96; P.M.O., China, 1896-99; P.M.O., Western District, 1899-1902; Surgeon-General, 2nd Army Corps, Salisbury, 1902-3; raised with Mr. Cantlie R.A.M.C. Volunteers, 1883; founded, 1884, Medical Officers of Schools Association, London; and, 1886, drew up scheme for Army Nursing Service Reserve; Member, Committee International Health Exhibition, 1884; Member of Council, Royal Army Temperance Association, 1903; President, Poor Law Medical Officers’ Association; contested (L.) Woolwich, 1886, Fareham Division, Hampshire, 1906, and Brighton, 1910; Honorary Colonel, Home Counties Division, R.A.M.C., Territorial Force, 1908; received Distinguished Service Reward, 1910. Publications: Travels in the Euphrates Valley and Mesopotamia, 1873; and many publications on military and medical subjects.
THE END.