RAMC - Royal Army Medical Corps
  Home » Field Ambulances » Territorial Force Field Ambulances » 1st East Anglian Divisional Field Ambulance »
Search RAMC Personnel Profiles The RAMC in WarThe RAMC Chain of Evacuation Contact Us
RAMC Units
 Army Medical Services 
 Home Service 
 Ambulance Trains 
 Casualty Clearing Stations 
 Field Ambulances 
 Cavalry Field Ambulances 
 Combined Field Ambulances 
 Home Services Field Ambulances 
 Mounted Brigade Field Ambulances 
 New Army Field Ambulances 
 Regular Army Field Ambulances 
 Royal Naval Field Ambulances 
 Territorial Force Field Ambulances 
  nokta1st East Anglian Divisional Field Ambulance
 1st East Lancashire Divisional Field Ambulance 
  nokta1st Highland Divisional Field Ambulance
 1st Home Counties Divisional Field Ambulance 
  nokta1st London Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta1st Lowland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta1st North Midland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta1st Northumbrian Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta1st South Midland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta1st Welsh Divisional Field Ambulance
 1st Wessex Divisional Field Ambulance 
  nokta1st West Lancashire Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta1st West Riding Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd East Anglian Divisional Field Ambulance
 2nd East Lancashire Divisional Field Ambulance 
 2nd Highland Divisional Field Ambulance 
  nokta2nd Home Counties Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd London Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd Lowland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd North Midland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd Northumbrian Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd Welsh Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd Wessex Divisional Field Ambulance
 2nd West Lancashire Divisional Field Ambulance 
  nokta2nd West Riding Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd East Anglian Divisional Field Ambulance
 3rd East Lancashire Divisional Field Ambulance 
  nokta3rd Highland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd Home Counties Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd London Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd Lowland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd Northumbrian Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd South Midland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd Welsh Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd Wessex Divisional Field Ambulance
 3rd West Lancashire Divisional Field Ambulance 
  nokta3rd West Riding Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta4th London Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta5th London Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta6th London Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta2nd South Midland Divisional Field Ambulance
  nokta3rd North Midland Divisional Field Ambulance
 Hospitals 
 Non RAMC personnel attached to British Medical Units 
 RAMC Personnel attached to Colonial/Associated Medical Units
 Regimental Medical Establishments 
 Sanitary Sections 
 Ships - Hospital/Transport 
 Unit not yet known 
 X - Other medical units 
 Y - WW1 Medical Victoria Crosses
 Z - Photographs (Nothing known)
Personnel Search
 
Use keywords to search
by first or last name
RAMC profile of:
Albert Walter James LORD
 
 


Place or Date
of Birth:
Ipswich, around 1895

Service Number:

TF Number:

Rank: L-Cpl

Unit: 1st East Anglian Divisional Field Ambulance

Attached To: 88th (1/1st East Anglian) Field Ambulance

Enlistment Location: Ipswich, Suffolk

Also Served:

Outcome: Survived the war

Date Died:
Age Died:

Where Buried and/or Commemorated:

Awards:

Gazette Reference:
 


Other Information:

Albert joined the Territorial Force on 13th February 1912, he was seventeen years old, a 'Cutter ?' by trade, and living at 190 Woodbridge Road, Ipswich, Suffolk. He entered the war in Egypt on 1st April 1915. On 26 July 1915, Albert was wounded in action at Dardanelles with a gun shot wound to his right leg. He was initially admitted to 11 Casualty Clearing Station and then hospital, before being evacuated back to the UK on H.M.H.S. Goorkha, where he spent the next 8 months recovering. He re-entered the war on 9th May 1916 in France and was based at Rouen. He was wounded again in the field on 16th April 1917, but returned to duty the following day. He then re-joined 88th (1st East Anglian) Field Ambulance in France after they had returned from Galipolli, and he spent the remainder of the war on the Western Front with them. Albert was disembodied on demobilsation on 15 August 1919. [Information source: Service record] the son of Albert and Amelia Lord.


 
 
Back Add Additional Info
 
 ©2007-2024 RAMC: Royal Army Medical Corps WW1 Developed by: Paramount Digital marketing