Sunday, 27 February, 1916
A very miserable day I had to do
a lot of piety to fill up time.
Spent a good part of the afternoon
writing to Thomas.
Soon after tea the telephone rang
up. Violet said a gentleman wanted
to speak to me, but when I got there,
I could not hear him, then a woman’s
voice came & this was the Housekeeper
at the North Wall to say Capt Gravely
of the Hospital Ship Oxfordshire was
very anxious to show us the ship if
we would come in tomorrow morning
This is the ship Marie went to Malta
on & Capt G — wrote to me to tell me
how she got on & of her safe arrival
so I asked him to let us know when
he came to Dublin again. We arranged
to meet him at T & C offices at 11oc.
The Germans claim today that they
have taken one of the outer forts of
Verdun but the French say all these
forts have been dismantled & that there
were no guns there or soldiers.
(No Reference Available)
Thomas Patrick Martin
Born on St. Patrick’s Day, 17 March 1891 and died in 1954, Thomas Shannon Patrick was Mary Martin's son and was known in the family as Tommy. He served in the 5th Battalion of the Connaught Rangers, a famous Irish regiment of the British Army but survived the war. Violet Mary Martin
Born on 29 August 1896, Violet Mary was Mary Martin's daughter. She worked as a nurse during the First World War and later became a Dominican nun. North Wall
Part of Dublin docks and the location of T&C Martin, the Martin family firm and Mary Martin's main source of income. Captain Gravely
Unidentified as yet. Hospital Ship Oxfordshire
Hospital ship for the British Army used in both Gallipoli and Salonika campaigns. Marie Martin journeyed to Malta on this ship. Marie Helena Martin
Born 25 April 1892 and died 27 January 1975. Marie Helena was Mary Martin's daughter and worked in Malta and France as a VAD nurse during the First World War. In 1937 she founded the religious order Medical Missionaries of Mary. Malta
Mediterranean island south of Sicily and part of the British Empire. Marie Martin served there as a VAD from October 1915 to April 1916. T & C Martins
The headquarters of the Martin family's firm in D'Olier Street in central Dublin. Verdun
City in north-eastern France, site of a prolonged and moral-sapping battle between German and French forces beginning in February 1916. |