Place | Europe: United Kingdom |
---|---|
Accession Number | REL34108.003 |
Collection type | Heraldry |
Object type | Medal |
Physical description | Bronze |
Maker |
Unknown |
Place made | United Kingdom |
Date made | 1902 |
Conflict |
Period 1900-1909 |
Metropolitan Police Bronze Coronation Medal 1902 : First Officer J T Woods, St John Ambulance
Metropolitan Police Coronation Medal 1902 with incorrect ribbon. Unnamed as issued.
Awarded to John Thomas Woods, St John Ambulance and Red Cross. Woods was born 23 December 1872 in Suffolk, England and joined the St John Ambulance Brigade (SJAB) in 1895, quickly gaining certificates in First Aid and Nursing and Hygiene. He gained his First Aid Voucher in April 1896 and First Aid Medallion in May 1897. In that same year he was awarded the St John Ambulance Medallion for Service in London, having been appointed First Officer, Stores. In 1902 Woods volunteered for six months service in the Boer War, in his capacity as Stores Officer and was attached to the Ipswich Corps. Some sixty members of the approximately 1,800 SJAB members who volunteered died on service in South Africa between 1899 and 1902, most of disease, usually typhoid. The 1902 coronation of King Edward VII required massive crowd control, security and first aid services and participating members of the Police and Ambulance services were rewarded with a medal. Woods was awarded the King Edward Medal for Ambulance Service (not present in this group) and as well as this medal, the Metropolitan Police Coronation Medal. Woods was also First Aid Officer for King Edward’s funeral in May 1910. At the outbreak of the Second Balkan War in 1913, he volunteered for service with the Red Cross, assisting the Greek Medical Corps at Salonika. In 1916, Woods and his wife emigrated to Queensland, Australia where Woods gained employment with the permanent staff of the Queensland Ambulance Transport Brigade (QATB), serving as Deputy Superintendent with various ambulance stations (Kidstone, St Lawrence, Landsborough) until his wife’s ill-health forced a move to Brisbane in 1924. He remained with the QATB’s main office in Brisbane until he retired in February 1941, aged 68.