AustLit logo

AustLit

Lynette Ramsay Silver Lynette Ramsay Silver i(A87780 works by)
Born: Established: 1945 ;
Gender: Female
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 y separately published work icon Angels of Mercy : Far West, Far East Lynette Ramsay Silver , Binda : Sally Milner Publishing , 2019 17358678 2019 single work biography 'Angels of Mercy: Far West and Far East, tells the gripping stories of two Australian nursing sisters, who overcame the challenging adversities of two very different circumstances.

'In the 1930s, Marjorie Silver was employed by The Far West Children’s Health Scheme and became their first permanent flying sister, based in Bourke. She fought a single-handed war against heat, dust and isolation of the outback to bring vital medical assistance to the far west of New South Wales, before moving on to central Queensland where she established a clinic at Mt Margaret station, in close co- operation with the flying doctor, based at Charleville. In 1964, she moved to Brunette Downs, Northern Territory, where she continued to make use of her nursing skills at the aboriginal Camp and in the station’s hospital. This previously untold story also involves the topical Nancy Bird, who was employed as the sister's pilot for the first nine months.

'Whilst Sister Silver was fighting a battle against the harsh elements of the bush, another dedicated woman of about the same age had graduated as a nursing sister with a view to overseas travel. Little did she know that she would shortly embark on a sea voyage to the exotic Far East, where she would engage in a battle for survival as an unwilling guest of the Emperor of Japan. Sister Pat Gunther joined the AIF and served in the Far East on the battlefield of Malaya and Singapore. She was captured and taken prisoner at Bangka Island, Sumatra. The story of the nurses imprisoned in various camps in Sumatra is not unknown, but this book delves far deeper than any other story to date and reveals the 'secret' that the nurses kept throughout their lifetimes. Author and military historian Lynette Ramsay Silver has an entire 'forensic' chapter devoted to the unraveling of this secret.

'This book has been compiled from their edited memoirs, supplemented by various conversations and interviews. Interspersed throughout the book and printed in italics, are Lynette Ramsay Silver’s historical details providing additional narrative to compliment first-hand accounts.

'The book also lists, for the first time, the name of every nurse who served in WW2. It also includes the fate of other internees that Sister Pat had met in Malaya and during her three years of captivity and the fate of the nurses evacuated from Singapore. It also includes the 29 women that served as doctors in the Australian Army Medical Corps during World War 2, as well as the names of the women who served as nursing sisters in the Royal Australian Navy, Royal Australian Air force, Australian Army Nursing Service and the Army Hospital.

'Angels of Mercy: Far West and Far East is a tribute to the huge contributions made by our nurses in the Australian Outback, and to those who served during wartime.'  (Publication summary)

 
1 Little Boy Lost Lynette Ramsay Silver , 2005 extract biography (Marcel Caux : A Life Unravelled)
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 12-13 March 2005; (p. 4-5)
1 5 y separately published work icon Marcel Caux : A Life Unravelled Lynette Ramsay Silver , Milton : John Wiley and Sons , 2005 Z1182433 2005 single work biography Reveals the true identity of World War I veteran Marcel Caux, the last Anzac in NSW and the last Australian survivor of the Battle of Poziers.
X