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Cora Roberton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Zealand wartime nurse
Cora Beattie Roberton
Birth nameCora Beattie Anderson
Born(1881-03-04)4 March 1881
Auckland, New Zealand
Died24 September 1962(1962-09-24) (aged 81)
Auckland, New Zealand
Buried
Purewa Cemetery, Meadowbank
AllegianceNew Zealand
Service/ branchNew Zealand Expeditionary Force
Years of service1915–1919
RankMatron
UnitNew Zealand Army Nursing Service
Battles / warsFirst World War
AwardsRoyal Red Cross
Mentioned in Despatches

Cora Beattie Roberton,RRC (néeAnderson; 4 March 1881 – 24 September 1962) was a decorated New Zealand nurse who ran several Allied hospitals in the United Kingdom during theFirst World War. In time, she was appointedmatron to every major hospital for injured New Zealand soldiers in England.

At 21 she was one of the survivors of an Australian steamer disaster when it sank off the coast of New Zealand in 1902. After the collision, she was picked up by the last lifeboat to leave the sinking ship.

Life and work

[edit]

BornCora Beattie Anderson inAuckland as one of eight children of Annie Buchanan and city engineer William Anderson, she attended the local Girls Grammar School from 1895 to 1898.[1][2][3]

On 9 November 1902, Anderson was rescued on the last lifeboat to depart the passenger steamerElingamite that sank 35 miles off the coast of New Zealand. She was rescued while standing in waist-deep water on the sinking steamer, and spent an estimated 25 hours, cramped and extremely cold in the open boat, before it found dry land. Of the 136 registered passengers on the steamer, fatalities from the collision numbered 28 passengers and 17 crew members, many of whom died from drowning or exposure to the elements. Her experience was detailed in the local papers.[1][4]

Anderson went on to study nursing, graduating from the Thames Hospital in 1909 and finishing her midwife training atSt Helen’s Hospital in Auckland. In 1910 she was appointedmatron of the Townley Maternity Home inGisborne, and in 1912 she became a district nurse forMāori patients in theRotorua district.[1]

War service

[edit]

With the outbreak of theFirst World War in August 1914, Anderson was selected to serve among the first 50 nurses sent to England with theNew Zealand Army Nursing Service (NZANS) under the direction of the BritishWar Office.[5] She was 34 years old when her group sailed for London on 8 April 1915. They soon left England to staff a hospital inCairo, Egypt, where they treated many hundreds of soldiers wounded during theGallipoli campaign.[1]

In June 1916, Anderson was sent back to England and promoted to matron so she could take charge of No. 1 New Zealand General Hospital atBrockenhurst. In December 1916, she was made matron of No. 3 New Zealand General Hospital atCodford on theSalisbury Plain and then, in April 1917, she became matron of the Hornchurch Convalescent Hospital inEssex, near London. That facility could handle up to 2,500 patients and treat 400 patients a day in its physiotherapy department. By 1918, about 20,000 patients had been treated at Hornchurch. Anderson was eventually appointed the matron of each of the major New Zealand hospitals in England.[1]

In 1917, the Minister of Public Health recommended that Anderson receive specialized training to administeranesthetics, which at that time, was given to patients only by doctors and not by nurses.[1] Due to her own failing health in 1919, Anderson was sent on leave to New Zealand and was discharged from her official duties even though she remained on the Service and Temporary Reserve of the NZANS until her retirement in 1921. In total, she served overseas for more than four years. After the war, Anderson became President of the Auckland Branch of the Returned Army Nursing Sisters Association for several terms.[1]

Personal life

[edit]

On 1 October 1919, Anderson married Eric Butterfield Roberton and changed her name toCora Roberton. Eric Roberton had been a farmer atTahora inTaranaki, New Zealand, before the war. When he was wounded, he was sent to the New Zealand General Hospital at Brockenhurst in England in October 1917, where he met Anderson.[1]

In 1925, the Robertons had a daughter Elizabeth May and a son Craig and farmed in the Taranaki until 1948, when they moved to Auckland. Cora Roberton died there on 24 September 1962 at the age of 81. She is buried in Purewa Cemetery inMeadowbank, Auckland, alongside her husband and daughter.[1][6]

Distinctions and awards

[edit]

Anderson was awarded the following decorations and medals for her service in the First World War. The medals and badges are held at theAuckland War Memorial Museum.[1][2][7]

References

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  1. ^abcdefghij"WW1 Matron Cora Beattie Anderson".Remuera Heritage. Retrieved2022-08-21.
  2. ^ab"Centograph".Online Cenotaph, Cora Beattie Anderson. Retrieved2022-08-21.
  3. ^"Life story: Cora Beattie Anderson Now Roberton | Lives of the First World War".livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk. Retrieved2022-08-21.
  4. ^Taonga, New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu."Improved safety".teara.govt.nz. Retrieved2022-08-21.
  5. ^"Advanced Search | Australian War Memorial".www.awm.gov.au. Retrieved2022-08-21.
  6. ^"Roberton, Cora Beattie".Purewa Cemetery. Retrieved2022-08-21.
  7. ^"WW1 Awards by Award".www.nzans.org. Retrieved2022-08-21.
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