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John Oxley Library

ANZAC girls in India

By Marg Powell, Specialist Library Technician, Metadata Services | 12 January 2016

Nurse Annie Sim

Nurse Annie Sim, 4946 Pierce Collection, John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland.

This feisty looking lady, wearing a lovely smile and Indian anklets, is Nurse Annie Grant Sim “Tim” who served in India during the First World War. The State Library of Queensland has recently digitised a photograph album, of her time in the East.

Annie who was born in Ipswich, enlisted in the Australian Army Nursing Service, on 19 May 1917. Aged 26 she sailed from Sydney for service in India a week later, along with 53 other nurses - 14 from Queensland, 18 from Victoria, 1 from NSW, 15 from South Australia and 5 from Western Australia.

On board SS Khiva

On board S.S. Khiva, 1917, 4934 Pierce Collection, John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

Annie Sim was assigned to No 34 Welsh Hospital, Deolali, which was situated in open hill country, 260 km north east of Bombay. It was a huge complex of old barracks, bungalows and huts, spread over 2.5 km and could house over 2000 patients.

Convalescent patients and Australian nurses, India

Convalescents, No 34 Welsh Hospital, Deolali, India, ca.1917 
Item 0051, 4934 Pierce Collection, John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

Between July 1916 to 1919, 560 members of the AANS served in India, alongside their British counterparts, where they faced the challenges of culture, language, an oppressive climate and primitive conditions.

They nursed British and Indian soldiers and Turkish prisoners of war, with diseases such as malaria, smallpox, Spanish influenza and cholera - illnesses to which some nurses succumbed.

Australian nurses in rickshaws, Colombo

Australian nurses, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 1917
Item 102, 4934 Pierce Collection, John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

The postcard above shows six Queensland nurses in rickshaws, no doubt as they were about to embark on a tour of Colombo, in December 1917.

They are from left to right: Amy Warner, Ada Hockings, Alice Harrod, Margaret Halpin, Christina Durack and Constance Frost. Like any service personnel who serve overseas, Annie and her fellow nurses took the opportunity to explore the historical sites of interest, when off duty.

Australian Nurses, Horseshoe Gate

At the Horseshoe Gate of the Buland Darwaza in Fatehpur Sikri, India, 1918
Item 80, 4934 Pierce Collection, John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

Her album is full of snapshots showing the marvels of India and its people. Above from left are: Beatrice Leyland, Winifred Payne (at rear), Annie Sim and Olga Parkinson.

Nurses' cricket team Deolali, India, 1918

Nurses' cricket team at No. 34 Welsh Hospital, Deolali, India, 1918
Item 110, 4934 Pierce Collection, John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

While many of the images are small and often quite faded, there are others that are amazingly clear, like the one below of the group taking tea, in Bombay.

Taking tea, Bombay

Taking tea, Bombay, 1917
Item 6, 4934 Pierce Collection, John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

Nurse Annie Sim served in Bombay until April 1919, when she returned to Australia. She married Cuthbert Thomas Porter in 1919 and lived in Queensland, until she died aged 96.

Further reading:

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