Anne Bryans
Dame Anne Margaret Bryans DBE DStJ FRSM (née Gilmour; 29 October 1909 – 21 April 2004) was a British humanitarian and healthcare administrator, remembered as an "indomitable doyenne of the caring profession."[1] She spent much of her life in the service of the British Red Cross Society and the Order of St John of Jerusalem in England, serving with distinction with the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) and Joint War Organisation during World War II. She was Chairman of the Joint Service Hospitals Welfare and VAD Committee from 1960 to 1989.[2] Early yearsAnne Margaret Gilmour was born at 9 Atholl Crescent in Edinburgh, Scotland on 29 October 1909, the eldest child of the Rt Hon. Sir John Gilmour of Lundin and Montrave, 2nd Baronet, and Mary Louise (née Lambert). She was privately educated at Montrave, the Gilmour family estate near Leven, Fife, by a Belgian governess and later studied at the Sorbonne.[2] CareerShe joined the British Red Cross Society in the late 1920 and became a member of staff in 1938. She became the Deputy Commissioner of the British Red Cross and St John War Organisation, Middle East Commission, in 1943 and was Commissioner from January 1945 to June 1945. She was the only woman to be appointed a Commissioner during the Second World War. She was Deputy Chairman of the BRCS Executive Committee from 1953 to 1964, and Vice-Chairman from 1964 to 1976.[3] Dame Anne Bryans died at Lundin Links in Fife, Scotland, on 21 April 2004, aged 94.[1] Personal lifeIn 1932, she married Lieutenant Commander John Reginald "Jack" Bryans RN FRGS, son of clergyman Reginald du Faure Bryans. The couple had one child, Lieutenant Commander John Patrick Gilmour Bryans RN FRGS, born in 1933.[2] Other appointments
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