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Dorothy Lawrence.
Dorothy Lawrence
was born in Hendon in 1896. Abandoned by her mother, she was adopted
by a guardian of the Church of England.
Lawrence had a strong
desire to become a journalist and she achieved some success with a few
articles published in The Times. She was living
in Paris when war was declared in 1914. Lawrence contacted several British
newspapers offering to work as a war correspondent in France.
All the editors refused to employ a woman to do what they considered
to be very dangerous work.
Lawrence returned
to England and in 1915 disguised herself as a man and joined the British
Army. Using the name Denis Smith, she served for ten days in the
British Expeditionary Force Tunneling Company
on the Western Front before her true identity
was discovered. The authorities detained her in a French convent until
she agreed to swear an affidavit promising not to tell the public how
she had fooled the army authorities.
Lawrence published
an account of her experiences, Sapper Dorothy Lawrence:
The Only English Woman Soldier, in 1919.
/FWWlawrence3.jpg)
Dorothy
Lawrence in military uniform (1915)
On her return to
England she settled in Canonbury, Islington. Lawrence published an account
of her experiences, Sapper Dorothy Lawrence: The
Only English Woman Soldier, in 1919.
In 1925 she claimed
she had been raped by her guardian. Lawrence was not believed and she
was sent to Colney
Hatch Lunatic Asylum in Barnet.
Dorothy Lawrence
died at Friern
Hospital, Barnet, Middlesex, in 1964.
Wikipedia:
Dorothy
Lawrence
Dorothy
Lawrence
Dorothy
Lawrence: Spartacus Biography
Forum
Debates
War
Propaganda Bureau
Dorothy
Lawrence
(1)
In her book, Sapper Dorothy Lawrence: The Only
English Woman Soldier, Dorothy Lawrence explained why she disguised
herself as a man.
I wanted to see
what an ordinary English girl, without credentials or money can accomplish.
If war correspondents cannot get out there, I'll see whether I cannot
go one better than those big men with their cars, credentials and money.
I'll see what I can manage as a war-correspondent.
(2)
When Lawrence's disguise was discovered, she was sent to Sir Charles
Munro.
We simply don't
know what to make of you. One thinks that you are a spy and another
says you must be a camp-follower and everyone has his own views on the
subject.
(3)
Lawrence Marzouk, Girl
who fought like a man (20th November, 2003)
Back in 1914, Dorothy
was a budding journalist in a male-dominated industry. Universal suffrage
was still a dream, but Dorothy, then in her mid-twenties, was determined
that not having a vote would not stop her rise as a journalist.
She achieved some
success with a few articles published in The Times before the start
of the war, but her determination to take her notepad to the front line
was met with scorn by male peers.
Numerous attempts
to join the Voluntary Aid Department, which sent women to participate
in war work, were rejected, so she resorted to guile and subterfuge
to achieve her goal.
Leaving with her
rickety bicycle, a brown bag and rudimentary French, she boarded a ferry
at Folkestone heading to Boulogne, in the hope of reaching the front
line disguised as a man.
Despite the expanses
of rubble and the rumble of falling shells, Dorothy found the French
clinging on to their famous joie de vivre. Passing through Paris she
headed towards the war zone, picking up some shooting lessons along
the way thanks to amenable French soldiers.
But her journey
was halted when she was arrested by French police in Senlis, two miles
short of the front line. She was ordered to leave the area and fled
to a forest. where rats, squirrels and 'invisible beasties' troubled
her. In the depth of night she felt like her blood was freezing. Despite
the certainty that she would be plagued by insect bites, she made her
bed in a haystack for the night. Her luck changed at the encounter of
two British soldiers in a Parisian cafe, who would come to be known
as her khaki accomplices.
After receiving
a smuggled uniform from the kind soldiers, known as her 'Khaki Accomplices',
Dorothy adapted the clothes to conceal her feminine figure, and used
bandages to hold down her bosom.