« Reply #3 on: Wednesday 12 September 18 14:33 BST (UK) »
I had four relatives in the RAMC during WWI. I don't have them in front of me now but I do recall some of the Medal Cards had more information on them than the others. I believe addresses were on the back of the medal card but at the time I downloaded the images there were no images of the addresses.
Fortunately one family member's RAMC army record survived the archive fire and this showed, next of kin and addresses, plus the ship's name and date when he went to France plus the fact that he'd been punished for taking shelter in a nun's convent one Christmas.
My grandfather received an army pension for being gassed in 1916 and his surviving record included the fact he'd signed up in 1911 as a spare time Territorial and there's a list of the short annual RAMC summer training camps he attended in Redcar, North Yorkshire and other places. His army number was carried forward when he was officially conscripted into the army and that record also survived, which shows his address, the date he married and his bride's name plus names/birth dates of his children. There was no mention of any ship's name when he sailed for, or left, France. His medical records also survived.
There's suffcient information on the surviving images to help identify a surviving family in the 1939 Register - if the family remained in the same town.
Best Wishes,
Rena
Aberdeen: Findlay-Shirras,McCarthy: MidLothian: Mason,Telford,Darling,Cruikshanks,Bennett,Sime, Bell: Lanarks:Crum, Brown, MacKenzie,Cameron, Glen, Millar; Ross: Urray:Mackenzie: Moray: Findlay; Marshall/Marischell: Perthshire: Brown Ferguson: Wales: McCarthy, Thomas: England: Almond, Askin, Dodson, Well(es). Harrison, Maw, McCarthy, Munford, Pye, Shearing, Smith, Smythe, Speight, Strike, Wallis/Wallace, Ward, Wells;Germany: Flamme,Ehlers, Bielstein, Germer, Mohlm, Reupke