Victory Medal: Dr Phoebe Chapple, Royal Army Medical Corps

Places
Accession Number REL/02991.003
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Medal
Physical description Bronze
Location Main Bld: First World War Gallery: Western Front 1917: Medical
Maker Unknown
Place made United Kingdom
Date made c 1920
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Description

Victory Medal. Unnamed as issued.

History / Summary

This Victory Medal was awarded to Dr Phoebe Chapple MM. Born in Adelaide on 31 March 1879, she was the youngest daughter of eight children of Frederic and Elizabeth Sarah (nee Hunter) Chapple. Phoebe was educated at the Advanced School for Girls in Grote Street, Adelaide. She entered the University of Adelaide at 16, gaining her Bachelor of Science in 1898. Inspired by South Australian women's advocate Dr Violet Plummer, Chapple went on to study medicine. She graduated as a doctor in 1904.

In February 1917, Chapple travelled to England to enlist following the Australian army's refusal to appoint women doctors. In England she joined the Royal Army Medical Corps and was appointed surgeon to Cambridge Hospital in Aldershot. Following Aldershot she was attached to Queen Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps and moved to France. Chapple was accorded the honorary rank of captain and was one of the first two women doctors sent to the front, which she 'regarded as an honor [sic] for Australia.' For her actions during an enemy air raid near Abbeville, France, in May 1918 she was awarded the Military Medal (MM).

Chapple died on 24 March 1967, aged 87 and was cremated, with full military honours, at Centennial Park Cemetery. An annual bursary in her name is awarded at St Ann's College, University of Adelaide, in recognition of her work and for her contribution to the academy.