The 'Royal Army Medical Corps' ('RAMC') is a specialist
corps in the
British Army which provides
medical services to all
British Army personnel and their families in war and in peace. Together with the
Royal Army Veterinary Corps, the
Royal Army Dental Corps and
Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps, the RAMC forms the British Army's essential
Army Medical Services.
The RAMC does not carry a
Regimental Colour or
Queen's Colour, although it has a Regimental Flag. Nor does it have
battle honours, as elements of the corps have been present in almost every single war the army has fought. Because it is not a fighting arm, under the
Geneva Conventions, members of the RAMC may only use their weapons for self-defence. For this reason, there are two traditions that the RAMC perform when on parade:
★ Officers do not draw their swords - instead they hold their scabbard with their left hand while saluting with their right.
★
Other Ranks do not fix
bayonets.
Unlike medical officers in some other countries, medical officers in the RAMC (and the
Royal Navy and
Royal Air Force) do not use the "Dr" prefix, in parentheses or otherwise, but only their rank, although they may be addressed informally as "Doctor".
Insignia
The RAMC, like every other British regiment, has its own distinctive unit insignia.
★ Dark blue
beret, the default Army colour worn by units without distinctive coloured berets. The exception is members of 225 Scottish General Support Medical Regiment (previously Field Ambulance), who wear the traditional Scottish
Tam O' Shanter headdress with Corps badge on tartan backing, and medical personnel attached to field units with distinctive coloured berets, who usually wear the beret of that unit (e.g. maroon for
The Parachute Regiment and sky blue for the
Army Air Corps).
★
Cap badge depicting the
Rod of Asclepius, surmounted by a crown, enclosed within a laurel wreath, with the regimental motto ''In Arduis Fidelis'', translated as "Faithful in Adversity" in a scroll beneath. The cap badge is worn 1 inch above the left eye on the beret. The cap badge of the other ranks must also be backed by an oval patch of dull cherry-red coloured cloth sewn directly to the beret. Officers do not use the backing, but have a sewn-on cloth cap badge instead.
★ Silver regimental collar pins (collar dogs), a miniature of the cap badge.
★
Stable belt comprising equal horizontal bands of (from top to bottom) dull cherry, royal blue, and old gold, reflecting the old uniform worn in the 1900s (dull cherry and royal blue), the gold depicting the royal in the title.
★ Silver belt buckle with engraved regimental badge

Regimental flag
History
Medical services in the
British military go as far back as the formation of the
Standing Regular Army after the
Restoration of
Charles II in
1660. This was the first time a career was provided for a Medical Officer (MO), known as the Regimental Surgeon, both in peacetime and in war. The Army was formed entirely on a regimental basis, and a MO with a
Warrant Officer as his Assistant Surgeon was appointed to each regiment, which also provided a hospital. The MO was also for the first time concerned in the continuing health of his troops, and not limited to just
battlefield medicine. This regimental basis of appointment for MOs continued until it was abolished in 1873.
In
1898,
officers and
soldiers providing medical services were incorporated into one body known by its present name, the Royal Army Medical Corps.
The RAMC began to develop during the Boer War, but it was during the
First World War that it reached its apogee both in size and experience. During Britain's colonial days the RAMC had set up clinics and hospitals in countries where British troops could be found.
In modern times it has once again contracted and its main bases, the Queen Alexandra Hospital Millbank, and the Cambridge Military Hospital, Aldershot, have now closed.
The military medical services are now very much tri-service, with the hospital facilities of Army, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy combined. The main hospital facility is now the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine in Birmingham, a joint military-NHS centre. The former
Royal Naval Hospital Haslar in
Gosport, near
Portsmouth, became the tri-service
Royal Hospital Haslar, however it was decommissioned in March 2007. The majority of injured service personnel are now treated in
Selly Oak Hospital, Birmingham, despite recent press coverage of poor conditions there.
[1] Derriford NHS hospital in
Plymouth, North Allerton NHS hospital in Yorkshire, and
Frimley Park Hospital (near
Aldershot) also have military wards.
Colonels-in-chief
★
FM HRH Arthur William Patrick Albert, 1st Duke of Connaught & Strathearn,KG, KT, GCB, GCSI, GCMG, GCIE, GCVO, GBE, VD, TD (1919–1942)
★
HM Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother (1942–2002)
★
HRH The Duke of Gloucester KG, GCVO (2003–present)
Order of Precedence
Successive changes in title
★ Medical Staff Corps (1855–1857) (other ranks only)
★ Army Hospital Corps (1857–1884) (other ranks only)
★ Army Medical Department (1873–1898) (officers only)
★ Medical Staff Corps (1884–1898) (other ranks only)
★ Royal Army Medical Corps (1898–present)
Gallantry Awards
Since the
Victoria Cross was instituted in 1856 there have been 29 Victoria Crosses and two bars awarded to army medical personnel. A bar, indicating a subsequent award of a second Victoria Cross, has only ever been awarded three times, two of them to medical officers. Twenty-three of these Victoria Crosses are on display in the
Army Medical Services Museum. The corps also has one recipient of both the Victoria Cross and the
Iron Cross. One officer was awarded the
George Cross in the Second World War. A young female member of the corps, Private
Michelle Norris, became the first woman to be awarded the
Military Cross following her actions in
Iraq on
June 11 2006.
[2]
| Surname | First Name/s | Awarded while serving with |
|---|
| 'ACKROYD' | Harold | Royal Army Medical Corps att'd The Royal Berkshire Regiment |
| 'ALLEN' | William Barnsley | Royal Army Medical Corps att'd Royal Field Artillery |
| 'BABTIE' | William | Royal Army Medical Corps |
| 'BRADSHAW' | William | 90th Regiment (The Cameronians) |
| 'CHAVASSE' | Noel Godfrey | Royal Army Medical Corps att'd The King's (Liverpool Regiment) Bar: same |
| 'CREAN' | Thomas Joseph | 1st Imperial Light Horse (Natal) |
| 'DOUGLAS' | Henry Edward Manning | Royal Army Medical Corps |
| 'FARMER' | Joseph John | Army Hospital Corps |
| 'FOX-RUSSELL' | John | Royal Army Medical Corpsatt'd The Royal Welch Fusiliers |
| 'GREEN' | John Leslie | Royal Army Medical Corps att'd The Sherwood Foresters |
| 'HALE' | Thomas Egerton | 7th Regiment (The Royal Fusiliers) |
| 'HARDEN' | Henry Eric | Royal Army Medical Corpsatt'd 45 Royal Marine Commando |
| 'HARTLEY' | Edmund Barron | Cape Mounted Riflemen, SA Forces |
| 'HOME' | Anthony Dickson | 90th Perthshire Light Infantry |
| 'INKSON' | Edgar Thomas | Royal Army Medical Corpsatt'd Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers |
| 'JEE' | Joseph | 78th Regiment (The Seaforth Highlanders) |
| 'LE QUESNE' | Ferdinand Simeon | Medical Staff Corps |
| 'LLOYD' | Owen Edward Pennefather | Army Medical Department |
| 'MALING' | George Allen | Royal Army Medical Corpsatt'd The Rifle Brigade |
| 'MANLEY' | William George Nicholas | Royal Regiment of Artillery Awarded Iron Cross 1870 |
| 'MARTIN-LEAKE' | Arthur | VC : South African ConstabularyBar : Royal Army Medical Corps |
| 'MOUAT' | James | 6th Dragoons (Inniskilling) |
| 'NICKERSON' | William Henry Snyder | Royal Army Medical Corps |
| 'RANKEN' | Harry Sherwood | Royal Army Medical Corpsatt'd King's Royal Rifle Corps |
| 'REYNOLDS' | James Henry | Army Medical Department |
| 'SINTON' | John Alexander | Indian Medical Service |
| 'SYLVESTER' | William Henry Thomas | 23rd Regiment (The Royal Welch Fusiliers) |
Trades/Careers In The 21st century
RAMC Officer Careers:
★
Doctor (Medical Officer)
★
Pharmacist
★
Physiotherapist
★
Medical Support Officer
RAMC Soldier Trades:
★
Clinical Physiologist
★
Combat Medical Technician
★
Operating Department Practitioner
★
Pharmacy Technician
★
Environmental Health Technician
★
Laboratory Technician
★
Radiographer
See also
★
Structure of the British Army: The Services
★
Combat medic
References
1.
2.
★ Blair, J.S.G. ''Centenary History of the Royal Army Medical Corps, 1898–1998''. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, 1998.
★ Brereton, F.S. ''The Great War and the RAMC.'' London: Constable, 1919.
★ Lovegrove, P. ''Not Least in the Crusade.'' A Short History of the RAMC. Gale and Polden, 1955.
External links
★
Royal Army Medical Corps website
★
Army Medical Services Museum Webpage