Nora Kathleen Fletcher
Nora Kathleen Fletcher (1 February 1880 - 18 August 1976), known in later life as Paula Ian Alexander, was a decorated Australian nurse, who led the British Red Cross nurses in France and Belgium as principal matron during World War I. Early lifeFletcher was born on 1 February 1880 in the Sydney suburb of Woollahra.[1][2] Her parents were Ann Marian Fletcher née Clarke, an embroiderer who made the velvet bag to hold The Ashes urn, and John Walter Fletcher. Her brother, John Fletcher, became a politician in Queensland.[3] She was educated privately by a governess. When she was 20, she went to train to be a nurse at the St Kilda Hospital in Woolloomooloo.[4] She was appointed as a probationary nurse in the public service in 1902,[5] and graduated as a nurse in 1906 from the Coast Hospital (later known as Prince Henry Hospital) in Little Bay.[2][4] CareerSix years before World War I broke out, Fletcher moved to England. During this time, in her work as a nurse she travelled to places such as the French Riviera, Italy and Cairo.[4] After war was declared, she joined the British Red Cross in September 1914. Fletcher was one of the first of the British Red Cross nurses to arrive in France, and she was among the last to leave. She was based in Boulogne.[4] She was promoted to matron, taking command of a unit.[6] She soon became the principal matron of all the British Red Cross personnel in France and Belgium hospitals, with up to 400 army sisters under her charge, organising the movement of all women workers who passed through France, Italy, Malta and Egypt.[7][2][4] Praise for her work included:
In 1915, in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace, King George V awarded Fletcher the Royal Red Cross (1st class) for her distinguished service in France.[8][9][2] In 1916, Fletcher was made a Honorary Serving Sister of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem.[4] She was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1920.[2] In November 1921, the French government awarded her the Medaille de la Reconnaisance francaise, or Medal of French Gratitude, for her work during the war.[4] Later lifeIn 1968, Fletcher's brother and sister donated her papers, photographs and medals to the State Library of New South Wales.[4] Fletcher, who was known as Paula Ian Alexander, spent her later life living in Torquay, Devon, England, and died there aged 96, in the Ardvar nursing home, on 18 August 1976.[10][11] References
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