Medical Officer uses jackknife to amputate a hand.

Army Structure

Britain

Health and Medicine

Infantry

Second World War

The Royal Irish Fusiliers

Retreat to Dunkirk

During the 1st Battalion The Royal Irish Fusiliers’ actions in the area around Ninove near the River Dender (Dendre) on 19/20 May 1940, a piece of shrapnel shattered Bandsman Hardcastle’s hand while he was carrying a stretcher case. The Medical Officer, whose full medical kit was inaccessible, was compelled to amputate the injured hand using a jackknife. After this ordeal Hardcastle, insisting that he was feeling well, marched a further five miles before he was found room on motor transport. Others soldiering on in adversity included Captain P C Murphy with shrapnel through one lung and the oldest soldier in the Battalion, Fusilier Mulligan an Old Contemptible who had joined in 1915, carrying the rifle and kit of a wounded comrade for some 20 miles.

Below: A typical British Army clasp knife with an attached official label headed ‘WORKING PATTERN No M 313’. This pattern of clasp knife was standard issue from the late 1930s until the early 1950s.

Sidearm, Knife, clasp (2 piece) Working Pattern
Sidearm, Knife, clasp (2 piece) Working Pattern© IWM (WEA 2106)