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Edith Cavell, The Biography as Film, 1939


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Edith Cavell, 1865-1915

 

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Edith Cavell  was a British nurse, working in German-occupied Belgium during the First World War. She helped hundreds of British, French and Belgian soldiers escape the Germans and was arrested, tried and executed in 1915.

Edith was born in the village of Swardeston, Norfolk. She was the daughter of a rector and worked as a governess in Belgium, before training to be a nurse in London. She worked in hospitals in Shoreditch, Kings Cross and Manchester and then accepted a position in Brussels as Matron in Belgium's first training hospital and school for nurses. There was no established nursing profession in Belgium at the time of Edith's appointment, and her pioneering work led her to be considered the founder of modern nursing education in that country. She was in Norfolk visiting her mother when the First World War broke out in 1914. On hearing of the threat to Belgium, from the advancing German troops, she felt it was her duty to return to Brussels immediately.

By 20 August, Brussels was occupied by the Germans. The nursing school became a Red Cross hospital, treating casualties from both sides, as well as continuing to treat civilians. In September 1914, Edith  was asked to help two wounded British soldiers trapped behind German lines following the Battle of Mons. She treated the men in her hospital and then arranged to have them smuggled out of Belgium into the neutral Netherlands. She became part of a network of people who sheltered Allied soldiers and Belgians eligible for military service, arranging their escape. Over the next 11 months she helped around 200 British, French and Belgian soldiers, sheltering them in the hospital and arranging for guides to take them to the border. On 5 August 1915, she was arrested for this activity and placed in solitary confinement in St Gilles Prisonin Brussels.

Edith was tried at court martial on 7 October 1915, along with 34 other people involved in or connected to the network. She was found guilty and sentenced to death. She was shot by a firing squad at the Tir National, the Brussels firing range, on 12 October 1915.
   
Although her execution was legal under international law, it caused outrage in Britain and in many neutral countries, such as the United States. She became a symbol of the Allied cause, and her memory was invoked in recruitment posters and messages in Britain and around the world.

After the war, her body was exhumed and escorted to Britain. A memorial service was held at Westminster Abbey, and she was reburied in Norwich Cathedral.

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An image of nurse Edith Cavell, sitting in a garden in Brussels with her two dogs before the outbreak of the First World War. The dog on the left, "Jack" was rescued after her execution.

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World War 1 recruiting poster urging South Africans to arms. The poster urges South Africans to avenge the execution of  nurse Edith Cavell

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Australian First World War poster depicting a German officer standing over the body Nurse Edith Cavell 

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Postcard depicting Cavell being executed wearing her nurse's uniform, which in reality she had made a point of not wearing.

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The Edith Cavell Memorial by Sir George Frampton, in London. The memorial is sited in St Martin's Place, just outside the northeast corner of Trafalgar Square. The site is adjacent to the first headquarters of the British Red Cross, originally located at 7 St Martin's Place.

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Moritz von Bissing - Wikiwand

Exzellenz Moritz Freiherr von Bissing, the military governor of Belgium (on right in Garde du Corps uniform)
insisted that the sentence be carried out

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