Maritzburg Ambulance Corps
The Maritzburg Ambulance Corps (MAC) was raised in Pietermaritzburg to support the local Rifle Association and was “accepted for service at Fort Napier after the battle of Colenso.” The men of the MAC had then been transferred to serve as Orderlies on the Hospital Ship ‘Nubia’, which was anchored in Durban Bay. (Letter dated 5/3/1900 from Assistant Superintendent C E Arlidge, MAC, to Colonel Hime, Premier of Natal.)
The purpose of Arlidge’s letter was to request that the men of the MAC be put to their intended purpose as stretcher bearers at the front. The request was not acceded to mainly because none of the Rifle Associations were on front-line service. Also, the MAC had an enrolment of only 19 men and could at most service only two stretcher parties of eight men each, the standard number then being used by the Natal Volunteer Ambulance Corps (NVAC), which had been on active service since mid-December 1899. This unit had in the field 1200 men, while its partner, the Natal Indian Ambulance Corps (NIAC) numbered 600 men. The men of the MAC were therefore obliged to remain as Orderlies on the ‘Nubia’. Only in the case of a few of them is anything recorded about their subsequent service.
The men who made up the unit were recorded on the QSA medal roll in the National Archives at Kew (WO100/225, page 267). All were recorded as being issued with the ‘Natal ‘ clasp. It will take a careful examination of the original roll to determine how many medals were actually issued. At least one was ”returned to Woolwich”, while it seems unlikely than a deserter (R Rogers) received a medal. The following men are named on the roll:
Superintendents A E Albert and C E Arlidge*.
Sergeants ? ? John, G F Robbins and W W Roberts.
Privates T V Baker, ? ? Beresford, G G Cope, H F Cottrill*, P Grimpson*, R P Patterson*, H J Roberts, R Rogers, F P Rowell*, ? ? Stevenson, W L Stuart*, A R Turpin, E A Varney* and H T Zeppenveldt.
In his letter referred to above, Superintendent Arlidge mentions that the MAC’s Medical Officer was Dr Strapp of Pietermaritzburg
* These men went on to serve in the Imperial Hospital Corps (IHC). Like the newly founded Imperial Bearer Corps (IBC), the IHC was intended to put in good order under the command of the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) the various volunteer medical units, both local and overseas, that had emerged in Natal since the war began.
The names of the MAC men known to have served in the IHC were gleaned from the unit’s nominal roll. Their names and new ranks, with enlistment and discharge dates, and other comments, are as follows:
Leader Charles Edward Arlidge. 27/6/1900 – 9/10/1900. ‘Nubia’, Durban.
Orderly Harry Frank Corttrill. 27/6/1900 – 6/11/1900.
Southampton.
Orderly Peter Henry Keith Grimson. 19/2/1901 – 19/8/1901. (He is listed as ‘Grimpson’ on the medal roll.)
Orderly Russell Patterson. 4/5/1900 – 14/1/1901.
Orderly Frank Percy Rowell. 27/6/1900 – 24/12/1900.
Own request.
Orderly William Bowry Stuart. 27/6/1900 (21/7/1900) – 17/12/1900.
Own
request. Re-enlisted 3/2/01 – 18/2/1902. Howick.
Orderly Edward A Varney. 27/6/1900 – 19/9/1900. Not likely to become efficient.
It is likely that six men remained on the ‘Nubia’, as is indicated in the case of Arlidge. Grimson joined the IHC later and he may have served elsewhere, which was the case with Stuart after he re-enlisted. What became of the other men of the MAC is not known.
Most of the men of the MAC are likely to have been on the first of the 15 return trips between Durban and Southampton undertaken by the ‘Nubia’. It took place between 3/4/1900 and 9/6/1900. It is also likely that after the end of the first trip the MAC ceased to exist.
The following can be inferred by matching names and dates to the trips of the ‘Nubia’:
Pte Patterson (MAC) missed the first trip, since he joined the newly-formed IHC while the ‘Nubia’ was away.
Pte R Rogers (MAC) “deserted in England”, and this must have happened during the first trip, since the men who went on the later trips were by then in the IHC, and Rogers was not.
Orderly Cottrill (IHC) was discharged at Southampton on 6/11/1900, which was during the third trip.
Leader Arlidge (IHC) was discharged on 9/10/1900, a day before the third trip began.
Orderly Rowell (IHC) was discharged on 24/12/1900, eight days after the end of the third trip.
Orderly Varney (IHC) was discharged on 19/9/1900 while the ‘Nubia’ was in Durban between its second and third trips.
The ‘Nubia’ docked at Southampton as a Hospital Ship for the last time on 5/9/1903, by which time its one-time MAC hospital staff had passed into the pages of its history as a footnote.
Brett Hendey
18/9/2015