Reunion place card with doll: Miss Gladys Crawford, Voluntary Aid Detachments

Place Oceania: Australia
Accession Number REL30527
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Heraldry
Physical description Cardboard; Cotton; Synthetic
Maker Unknown
Place made Australia
Date made c 1991
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Description

White cardboard place card made of a folded piece of cardboard with a circular section at the top. This section is printed with the emblem of the Royal Automobile Club of Australia and the main body is handwritten with 'Gladys Crawford'. Attached to the card is a small doll made of pipe cleaners and dressed in a blue Voluntary Aid Detachment dress with a white red cross head veil.

History / Summary

This place card marked the seat of Gladys Crawford at a 1991 Voluntary Aid Detachment Reunion. Gladys Lila Crawford was born in Benalla, Victoria in October 1908. During the 1930s she worked as a mothercraft nurse and in May 1939, aged 31, joined the Voluntary Aid Detachments. In February 1941 she volunteered for overseas service and formally enlisted in the Australian Military Forces on 21 April with the service number V13447. On 17 October she was discharged and joined the Australian Imperial Force and was assigned the new number VFX64863. She served initially at 115 Australian General Hospital at Heidelberg and on 1 November sailed for the Middle East from Sydney aboard the Queen Mary. From November 1941 to March 1942 Gladys served as a nursing orderly with 1 AGH in Palestine, transferring to 6 AGH for the remainder of her overseas service. The VAD returned home to Australia early in 1943 and in March that year the women became members of the newly formed Australian Army Medical Women's Service. From her enlistment in the AAMWS on 22 March 1943 Gladys underwent training at Darley, Victoria before her posting to 2/6 AGH in Atherton, Queensland. She remained there for over a year, transferring to 116 AGH in Cairns on 23 October 1944. In January the following year she moved to Redbank to serve with 128 AGH, moving in September to her last unit, 102 AGH. She remained here until her discharge on 24 April 1946. After the war Gladys returned to mothercraft nursing, gaining her qualifications in nursing and kindergarten care in the late 1940s. Gladys also became active within the Returned and Services League, serving at one time in the late 1960s and early 1970s as president of the Returned and Servicewomen's sub-branch of Victoria. She died on 1 December 2000.