
Liz in the picture presented Audrey with flowers to mark her retirement at the age of 90. Audrey had been a paid worker in Community Shop for many years.
All at Park View Project will miss Audrey lots.
It is also Audrey’s birthday.
Weevles Updates Disabled Bloggers Team
Weevl Bloggers Corner

Liz in the picture presented Audrey with flowers to mark her retirement at the age of 90. Audrey had been a paid worker in Community Shop for many years.
All at Park View Project will miss Audrey lots.
It is also Audrey’s birthday.

I think Colin Briggs is one of the best News Reporter’s on The BBC News on BBC One. I liked watching The BBC News when he was one and I thought he was very good.

This is the old outdoor paddling pool at The Seafront in Whitley Bay in the 60’s before I was born. It use to be very popular back then back in those days and loads of people use to go down and stay all day in the summer holiday’s when it was really hot and sunny and warm weather.

I am looking forward to watching Drama Queens sometime on itvx catchup. It is the new series of Drama Queens. It shows you what the soap actresses are like in real life and shows you their real life personalities in real life to.
At the start of the First World War many people harboured the view that war was ‘man’s business’. Front-line roles had, after all, always been undertaken by men.
Between 1914 and 1918 opinion changed when women – invigorated by years of struggle for female emancipation – stepped out from their traditional roles and placed themselves at the heart of the action.
Taking on key medical roles, they emerged from the conflict with newfound respect and observers heralded the war as ‘a revelation of woman’.
Trained nurses had been part of the military establishment since the 19th century. Thousands of untrained women now stepped forward to help support the care of the wounded.

Within the Wounded exhibition we hear the voice of Sophie Hoerner, who was stationed at No. 1 Canadian general hospital near Étaples. She paints a vivid picture of the scale and severity of the task faced by nurses as they cared for the wounded at the Western Front.
In a letter home she wrote:
‘No one could imagine the horrors of a war like this unless they are here and could see for themselves. I have never seen such awful wounds.’
The job of the war nurse was both varied and hectic. Some administered pain relief and redressed wounds. Others assisted the surgical teams in the operating theatres of casualty clearing stations, acting as anaesthetists or carrying out minor procedures when surgeons were rushed off their feet.
Female surgeons found it far harder to offer their services. The army was initially reluctant to make use of their skills, telling them ‘to go home and sit still’.
Undeterred, they set up voluntary hospitals on the Western and Eastern fronts – many staffed exclusively by women. One such volunteer was Dr Phoebe Chapple, who became one of the first at the front line and the first to be awarded a medal for gallantry.
On 29 May 1918, while she was visiting the Queen Mary’s Army Auxiliary Corps near Abbeville, the camp came under enemy attack. One bomb hit a trench where 40 staff had taken cover. In near darkness and with further risk of attack, Chapple worked her way along the trench, tending to the wounded.
Women also provided a vital link between the battlefield and medical units. The First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY) ran field hospitals and drove ambulances, often in extremely dangerous conditions.

Pat Waddell, an accomplished violinist, acted as an ambulance driver from 1916 onwards, having learned to drive in London by cajoling taxi drivers to let her take control of their vehicles. The FANYs challenged the traditional view of women drivers. One sergeant wrote:
‘When the cars are full of wounded no-one could be more patient, gentle or considerate, but when the cars are empty they drive like bats out of hell.’
Mairi Chisholm and Elsie Knocker travelled to Belgium as part of the Munro Ambulance Corps designed to support the Belgian Red Cross and transport the injured to hospitals away from the battlefield. They quickly decided that they could be of greater help to the wounded by treating them closer to the front line.
They set up their own dressing station in Pervyse near Ypres – only 90 metres from the action. Earning 17 medals for their bravery they became celebrated in the press as the ‘Angels’ of Pervyse, having saved hundreds of soldiers’ lives.


Perhaps the most famous woman to work at the front line was Marie Curie. By the time war broke out she was already a double Nobel prizewinner – one for physics (the first Nobel Prize to be awarded to a women), the other for chemistry.
Curie was shocked to see how soldiers’ lives were being lost because they had to be transported long distances for examination.
So she set about bringing diagnostic equipment to the battlefield.
Twenty vehicles were fitted out with X-ray units, darkrooms and technical personnel. Curie learned to drive so she could operate one of the mobile cars herself.
She also set up 200 stationary X-ray stations, helping train 150 women as radiology technicians to help run them.
Over 1 million wounded soldiers were examined thanks to her efforts, with Curie herself declaring:
‘The use of X-rays during the war saved the lives of many wounded men and saved many more from long suffering and lasting infirmity.’
Women’s front-line activity did not end there.
They acted in many other important roles, from telegraphist and cook to war correspondent and spy. Added to the vital work being carried out by female workers back at home, these varied roles show that the First World War was not just a conflict that made heroes, but many heroines as well.

I am looking forward to watching Wwe Wrestlemania 37 2021 on the Wwe Network again sometime I think it was that good. It was on back on Saturday the 10th April and Sunday the 11th April 2021. Wrestlemania Night 1 is on for 3 hours and 9 minutes and Wrestlemania Night 2 is on for 3 hours and 12 minutes.
Medical care throughout the First World War was largely the responsibility of the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC). The RAMC’s job was both to maintain the health and fighting strength of the forces in the field and ensure that in the event of sickness or wounding they were treated and evacuated as quickly as possible.
Every battalion had a medical officer, assisted by at least 16 stretcher-bearers. The medical officer was tasked with establishing a Regimental Aid Post near the front line. From here, the wounded were evacuated and cared for by men of a Field Ambulance in an Advanced Dressing Station.
The hospitals set up immediately behind the lines were often housed in tents during the First World War, including wards and operating theatres.
This was particularly true of Casualty Clearing Stations, with base hospitals further away from the fighting sometimes making use of existing or more permanent buildings.
A casualty then travelled by motor or horse ambulance to a Casualty Clearing Station. These were basic hospitals and were the closest point to the front where female nurses were allowed to serve. Patients were usually transferred to a stationary or general hospital at a base for further treatment. A network of ambulance trains and hospital barges provided transport between these facilities, while hospital ships carried casualties evacuated back home to ‘Blighty’.
As well as battle injuries inflicted by shells and bullets, the First World War saw the first use of poison gas. It also saw the first recognition of psychological trauma, initially known as ‘shell shock‘. In terms of physical injury, the heavily manured soil of the Western Front encouraged the growth of tetanus and gas gangrene, causing medical complications. Disease also flourished in unhygienic conditions, and the influenza epidemic of 1918 claimed many lives.


I love The Beach Boys 1960’s music from the 60’s from before I was born. I love listening to they songs and their music in my music library on my iPhone when I am out and about walking. Or on The Metro on my way to NTDF or on The Metro on my way back home from NTDF.