
Some years ago, coming hurriedly out of my study into the corridor on the ground floor, I still remember how I had nearly opened the door into an “extra” who was making his way from a “Green Room” into the Saloon for the next scene. His head was apparently bandaged and he was still in some sort of uniform.
Julian Fellowes, had turned Highclere or Downton into a World War 1 convalescent home whilst continuing the story of the Grantham family as they dealt with fundamental changes in their lives and the world at large.
He showed them trying to do their best to cope with shifting social changes as well as tragedy. It spurred me on to write a book about what really happened at Highclere during that time when it was indeed turned into a hospital during the war by my predecessor, Almina, the 5th Countess of Carnarvon.
I began by reading the letters in the archives from her patients which had been sent to her after the men had left Highclere. In real life they were transferred elsewhere to convalesce after their hospital treatment, usually to houses by the sea where the clean air was believed to be beneficial to healing. The letters were all about saying thank you and, as a researcher and writer, they gave so much detail about their injuries, about life at the castle, about the men’s families and about their fears and worries.
Even the handwriting gave clues about each man’s state of mind, wibbly wobbly if their hand were injured, sometimes in pencil, sometimes written on headed paper from their next port of call, full of courage and of hope but also sometimes of fear. Fear for the repercussions of their injuries but also the realisation that once they had passed their medical boards they would often return to the trenches, to the theatre of war once more.
I cannot read many of them without tears, not least at their gratitude for the kindness and expert professional nursing skills they received at Highclere. The best surgeons would come to operate once a week, the nurses would read to their patients or play scrabble with them or help them outside to sit under a tree. Cleanliness was key (it was before antibiotics), good food and, in Highclere’s case, whisky before dinner and perhaps some beer.
In comparison, hospital procedures have vastly improved over the last century and the advances in anaesthetics and knowledge have been extraordinary. Nevertheless, Lady Almina was always interested in the latest procedures. For example, the use of x-ray machines became more prevalent at this time so, helped with funding from Lord Alfred de Rothschild, Almina of course installed one in her hospital.
Many dictionary definitions of nursing begin by listing its functions and undoubtedly Almina wished to run a pragmatic, well organised hospital. She understood, however, the root of the word nursing – it emerges from word “nurshen, norishen ” meaning supplying with food and drink, of care and nurture. We may have more equipment today but time to nourish and nurture is always at the heart of good nursing.
The word “war” was scribbled shakily across the Highclere visitor book in August 1914. Everyone hoped it would all be over by Christmas but it was not to be.
Too many men “Knock-kneed, coughing like hags,.. cursed through sludge, Till on the haunting flares{they} turned our backs, And towards our distant rest began to trudge”. (Wilfred Owen)
Eventually, it was over and the Armistice was signed at 11am on the 11th day of the 11th month, 105 years ago. Quite literally, the arms were stopped.
Writing “Lady Almina” was in many ways a revelation. She was a woman who did all she could to improve the lives of strangers – someone else’s husband, son, father or brother, instinctively understanding it was about mental health as well as physical healing at a time when this was only dimly understood and rarely accepted.
Our forebears had such hopes for this day. For peace, for the laying down of arms and for making space for everyone. To be able to put arms around one another to comfort and say welcome – the best gift.
Thank you for continuing to share Highclere’s rich history with us! How much of present-day history will be lost because in these times no one takes the time to write letters or “Thank You’s”! Electronics are wonderful (when they work) but good old-fashioned pen to paper says so much more.
Pen and paper give us insights …
Thank you for this Lady Carnarvon,
It was reading your book about Lady Almeda during Covid that prompted me to search and find your beautiful Blogs. I have read and admired them ever since then. I loved reading your other books
also.
Bev Connaughton
Thank you Bev, very kind of you.
Nurses are so often overlooked in the big picture, but their contributions were/are immense. Thank you.
Nursing and care – part of being human
Dear Lady Carnarvon,
Thanku very much for your beautiful & informative piece today, very moving….
Let us all be grateful for our Freedom, albeit it bought at a terrible price – & let us all pray that it never happens again
Much love & thanks,
Caroline
I worked in a hospital for many years and I have the utmost respect for nurses.
The best gift – comfort & welcome – beautifully written.
Beautifully written. Can you tell us about the beautiful picture of the cross under the trees? Were any soldiers buried on the property? Seems that I remember you once wrote about a plane that went down there but was curious about the pictured cross. Thank you.
Hello Karen
No soldiers were buried here. The cross marks the site of where a B17 crashed into the hill near Heaven’s Gate during the second World War. Another plane, a Mustang also sadly crashed near the B17.
Things are so obviously different today, but I have no doubt that if you were the Lady of Highclere then, you would have done exactly what Lady Almeda did. Such a beautiful post.
Thank you for your sweet writing today about Almina, nurses, war memories , all so very heartfelt and appropriate on this Veteran’s Day. We are so grateful to the men who have died to protect the freedoms that we enjoy.
Lady Carnarvon,
Thank you for your warm tribute to the nurses and soldiers who were welcomed to Highclere in a very somber and frightening time. Thank you for capturing in your book the ways Lady Almina found to make their lives a little easier during convalescence. My husband is a Vietnam vet in another sorrowful war.
Martha
No war is not full of grief
How very moving ,thankyou
Lady Carnarvon, reading your words today fill my eyes with tears….
Lady Carnarvon, Lady Almina, what a compassionate and completely kind person she was. She helped all those soldiers and never thought of herself. Cheryl.
Merci pour continuer de parler des souvenirs, toujours intéressent, de votre famille. Comme toujours vos interventions sont pertinentes, bonne journée.
Thank you for continuing to talk about your family’s always interesting memories. As always your interventions are relevant, have a good day.
Lovely article today for Veterans/Remembrance Day.
Lovely the pictures of nurses and did you and lord Carnarvon have a wonderful weekend and lam fan of Downton Abbey and highcelere castle
Informative Blog written today & historic photos shown given today is Veterans Day.
Impressive Lady Almina & the 5th Earl Carnarvon were wanting and did convert their then home into a hospital to hopefully recover many soldiers that were damaged during their service in nasty WW1. Given what you have written about her in your book of her and your Blogs she seems like a generous and caring former Lady Carnarvon (which you are also as the current Lady Carnarvon).
That’s very kind, thank you.
Dear Lady Carnarvon,
Thank you for a wonderful message on Veterans Day ( in America). My grandma was a nurse during WW1 and greatly influenced my choice to become a nurse. I read your Lady Almina book a couple of years ago and loved it. Such a wonderful book! You really showed Almina’s spirit and determination to provide the soldiers with the best care possible. She was a true heroine.
Cynthia
Thank you Cynthia.
Dear Lady Carnarvon,
I have read your book, Lady Almina, 3 times now – what an incredible woman she was! I have read and enjoyed all your books as the history of Highclere and the Earls is endlessly fascinating to me – and I am so glad you have committed the time and effort to share life at Highclere – then and now – with us! Today’s post is a beautiful and poignant reminder of the meaning of this day to Highclere and the western world.
Pat Levis
That is very kind of you
Dear Lady Carnavon,
Quite simply, you are a treasure.
Thank you for remembering with perspective what so many others have forgotten. I expect that at Highclere, history is very much in the present.
With kindest regards and best wishes,
Gregory Gauthier
You are very kind Gregory, thank you.
It always interesting to hear the history of your home. Glad that Downton Abbey included the hospital scenes so that we could see how the family contributed to the war effort
Thank you so much for sharing your story here. I look forward to reading your book. My daughter works hard in the NHS, her words to me a few weeks ago came into my mind as I was reading. ” Mum, we need to be kind to one another, It is hard “out there”. Many of us do not live “out there” but we must take every opportunity to reach out, with love and practical care where we can.
I think looking back at how they cared for patients reminds us of what it is all about
I have been a nurse for 45 years . I truly loved the portrayal of nursing during WW1 in Downtown Abbey .
Thank you for sharing the nursing perspective.
I now live in Phoenix Arizona, originally from Grimsby, Lincolnshire. Yesterday I went to a cemetery in Mesa, Arizona where 23 RAF cadets are buried. They came over here to train as pilots during WW11. Unfortunately they were killed during their training. The airfield was called Thunderbird airfield . As the British didn’t know what a thunderbird was it was renamed Falcon Field . We sang God Save the King and wreaths were placed from different military branches. Paul Rennie OBE the British Consulate- General gave a speech. I took my poppy from the Tower of London 2014 exhibition and he recognized it. The poppy was one of 888,246 on display to honor the people killed in WW1. I was at Highclere when you had the remembrance service there .
There will always be a small part of England in Mesa Arizona.
Thank you Dianne, I’m glad you were here for our Heroes at Highclere service. Next September on 7th, we will be having a similar service on day two of our Heroes at Highclere weekend to remember all those who lost their lives in World War 2.
Thank you for such an inspiring piece and love to hear the history of Downton Abbey. I hope to visit one day sometime. It was good to see how the family all helped in the nations time of need
This week was such a time of remembrance, your writing and showing the photos. For those who lost so many in the wars, family can have the time to be together, never forgetting them.
Thank you for this.
Thank you
Lady Carnarvon, I always appreciate you sharing the rich history of Highclere. I loved your book about Lady Almina’s very impressive contribution. Like you she was a wonderful Highclere ambassador. Thank you!
She was amazing
Lady Carnarvon, Thank you so much for your post. Reading the letters and looking at the photographs gives a real sense of what happened at Highclere and at the many other large houses that were converted for hospitals and for convalescence. After visiting Highclere it gives such an insight into how these brave men were patched up and sent out to the front again. My grandfather was one of these men.
Thankfully he survived.
As always Lady Carnarvon, you’ve touched my heart with your writing. I remember the scene to which you referred to in the Downton convalescent home series. Those scenes also touched my heart as I spent some time in Iraq with United States Marines and upon returning home, I visited soldiers at Walter Reed Military Hospital in Washington, DC. Having worked with our military and yours over the years, those types of situations always brings me to tears of either joy or sadness for their sacrifice. God Bless you for reminding us about those who wear the uniform of our two countries. Keep up the great research and writing you’ve been doing, always a pleasure to read your blog posts each week. Love History.
Betty Kilbride
Thank you dear Betty, have a wonderful week.
Dear Lady Carnarvon,
I’ve read Lady Almina & The Real Downtown Abbey, shared it with many a friend.
I’d love to know more about what happened to her through her end of days.
Her widower choices seemed to put her on a path of decline. If not for your book, her life would be forgotten it seems-and that too of Alfred de Rothchild. They gave so much.
Do you suppose that loosing the 5th Earl and her changed status was an immense (and unfair perhaps) change to all she had done and given?
If there are places to find more information about her I’d appreciate knowing.
Thank you!
Kind Regards,
Karen
Good Morning
She continued to nurse as long as possible into WW2 – she returned often to Highclere and stayed with he beloved grandson my father in law – I am not sure anyone’s life continues on the same arc throughout life – we all have out entrances and exits and perhaps smaller roles on stage at various time. I thought however she deserved a standing ovation – always
Thank you for your poignant remembrances…
Wallace Craig
Midland Texas
Vietnam Veteran
As always, your words show a much clearer view of what was happening in that moment in time. You are so right in your reminder that physical pain, as well as emotional pain, are both present and that healing both is essential for a person to be whole and healed, in order to move forward in their journey. Your words are healing. Thank you
Thank you for writing this article on our Veterans Day in the US. My husband is a Vietnam Nam veteran who continues to battle two presumed Agent Orange cancers, so war still follows us today from years ago. Our oldest granddaughter will become an Army nurse next school year. I will show her your post. We also have a grandson who is a Marine fighter pilot so we continue to serve our country.
You must be so proud of your grand children.
I’m curious why you write with American spelling and not UK spelling? A lovely blog post as usual. I have your book of Lady Almina, and it’s wonderful. I bought it for research for my own novels. WWI is a fascinating era for me.
Have a great day.
I think google edits me without me noticing !!
I am just sitting down now at the end of what we now call Veteran’s Day in the U.S. (formerly Armistice Day). Thank you for this moving piece. Lady Almina was truly exceptional. She was very selfless and caring to do all that she did for these recuperating servicemen. She was also very forward-thinking in regard to caring for the “whole person” to include recreation, some enjoyment (e.g. whiskey, beer, good food) and mental health. Very impressive. I find that you also have that same kind, caring, adventurous spirit, otherwise you (and Lord C, of course) would never have made Highclere the truly successful stately home that it is today.
Team effort in every way!
Nurses today may wear scrubs, not whites, but they still are there for us during the worst times of our lives. Remember them every day.
Michael Breton
Roxbury, Maine USA
Proud husband of Tamara Breton, RN
Thank you for such a moving piece on Remembrance Day. As always, you write so beautifully and from the heart. It must have been moving to read the letters of thanks written to Lady Almina by the convalescing soldiers who’d been at Highclere. What a rich history your home has had and ho wonderful to know ho much being there meant to them all.
Lovely words, Lady
Dear Lady Carnarvon,
Thank you for sharing these important and painful moments that sadly, are the history of the world. Lady Almina was a strong and brave woman who helped so many people during those difficult periods.
And, with your words and your books, you are continuing to help people like me to be informed of what really happened and to never forget the past.
So thank you Lady Carnarvon from my heart.
Thank you
Thank you for all the books you have written about Highclere Castle and the family who called it home.
Dear Lady Carnarvon,
What a beautiful piece. I read your book about Lady Almina & enjoyed it tremendously. She was a force to be reckoned with! I look forward to all you books on the family history.
I spent this past Veterans Day on a US Navy Base in Pensacola, Florida. First visiting the great National Naval Aviation museum & closing the afternoon visiting my son-in-law’s father’s grave at the Barrancas National Cemetary (the 2nd oldest in the US). I was honored to be there on Veterans Day (& in the rain). It’s really moving to see all those white headstones lined up with such precision.
I look forward to you blogs every week.
Cheers!
Donna Guy
Chicagoland, USA
Thank you
Thank you, Lady Carnarvon. This makes me reflect on how much these caring environments did to acknowledge, support and heal the efforts and sacrifice of these men. Now, sadly our advanced and mechanised medical systems and society, at least in Australia, fail miserably to acknowledge and provide the personalised comfort, care and moral support that people fighting wars (that we may or may not personally believe in) pay on our behalf.
Dear Lady Carnarvon:
Belated thanks for this Monday’s blog.
Amazing how people will support each other during a time of crisis.
Until next time, stay well.
Perpetua Crawford