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Lot

№ 25

.

10 April 2024

Hammer Price:
£5,000

Six: Dr. Honoria S. Keer, Scottish Women’s Hospitals, who served as an Assistant Surgeon with the Girton and Newnham Unit

British War and Victory Medals (H. S. Keer); Serbia, Kingdom, Order of St. Sava, Officer’s badge, silver-gilt and enamel, Bishop with red robes; France, Third Republic, Croix de Guerre, bronze, reverse dated 1914-1917, with bronze star on riband; Medal of Honour, Ministry of War for Epidemics, silver, reverse embossed, ‘Miss Kear [sic] 1917’, with case of issue inscribed with the recipient’s name; together with the recipient’s Scottish Women’s Hospitals Medal 1914, bronze, unnamed; and the related miniature awards for the Great War campaign pair and the two French awards, good very fine (6) £1,000-£1,400

This lot was sold as part of a special collection, A Fine Collection of Medals to Female Medics.

View A Fine Collection of Medals to Female Medics

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Collection

Tony Sabell Collection, Dix Noonan Webb, June 2013.

Serbian Order of St. Sava London Gazette 12 August 1919:
‘In recognition of services while employed with the Scottish Women’s Hospitals in Serbia.’


Honoria Somerville Keer was born in Toronto, Canada on 26 December 1883, the daughter of Major-General Jonathan Keer, Bengal Staff Corps. She was educated at Hazel Bank, Malvern and at the University of Glasgow where she was awarded in 1910 the degrees of M.B. and Ch.B. At the outbreak of war she was serving as Resident Medical Officer at the Infirmary, Kilmarnock. She became Assistant Surgeon to the Girton and Newnham Unit of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals on its foundation and proceeded with it to Troyes in the Champagne district of France in May 1915. In October of that year the French Government transferred that hospital to Serbia. Soon it was obliged to retreat with the Serbian Army and from December 1915 it was sited in Salonika. In the Autumn of 1917 the unit was re-housed and re-constituted as the Calcutta Orthopaedic Centre - still under the command of its original Chief Medical Officer, Dr Louise McIlroy. As such, it continued to work in Salonika until early 1919 when it closed as a military hospital, being subsequently transferred to Belgrade to form The Elsie Inglis Memorial Hospital.

However, in April 1918 Dr Keer was transferred to Corsica as Chief Medical Officer of the Scottish Women’s Hospital for Serbian Refugees, operating under the Serbian Relief Fund. This hospital closed in April 1919.

After the war Dr Keer returned to England and took a Diploma in Tropical Medicine and Health in 1924. The following year she was appointed a Medical Officer to Nigeria, being posted to the Hospital in Lagos. Here she worked until 1931. Increasingly suffering from deafness, she returned to England in 1933. She died in London on 20 March 1969.