This day in history: 19 Jan 1942, EAST INDIES: British Army forces in British North Borneo formally surrender the province to the Japanese. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_occupation_of_British_Borneo
Goering, despite public belief was probably cured of his morphine addiction in the 1920's by a stay at a Aspudden Hospital. Quoting page 125 of The Devil's Disciples: Hitler's Inner Circle By: Anthony Read (published 2003). "Goering may or may not have been 'completely cured [of his drug addiction', as he and his doctors claimed - for the rest of his life there were conflicting reports of his drug habits for the rest of his life. However, when he gave himself up to the Americans at the end of the war he had only paracodine tablets with him, and he was painlessly weaned away from these within a few days. There was no evidence of a morphine addiction, which would have involved a much more difficult withdrawal process."
In August 1916 the British Government banned whistling for a taxi in the vicinity of a hospital, as it was affecting soldiers recovering from shell shock- http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1916/aug/15/whistling-for-taxi-cabs
"Four companies of the Royal Indian Army Service Corps, including a unit of the Bikaner State forces, served in France during the campaign on the Western Front, and some were evacuated from Dunkirk. Among them were three contingents of the Royal Indian Army Service Corps. One contingent was taken prisoner by German forces." Does Christopher Nolan's Dunkirk ignore the role of the Indian army? - BBC News
Sounds more like "let's find something over which we can bleat our offense and victimization." The movie is not some sweeping historical epic covering every tiny piece of the whole. Golly, how cruel, some, what, 400 soldiers out of 330,000 were not shown, even in passing, not that any of them had any piece in the stories being told. I suppose next we can expect to hear how this or that regiment or even battalion was not shown either. It's a movie, for Pete's sake, entertainment, not history. An Gordon, yes,I know this sounds like I'm railing at you, but I'm not, my target is the silly man with the complaint.
From Scotland's War- Before the First World War there were about 7,000 beds in military hospitals in the UK. By the time of the Armistice there were 364,133 beds, including 18,378 for officers. A large number of Auxiliary Hospitals was prepared by the Red Cross and by other voluntary effort. Before 1914 none of the large and medium-sized military hospitals (with 200 or more beds) was in Scotland. On 15 November 1918 there were, in Scottish Command, 1,112 equipped hospital beds for officers and 23,179 for other ranks. About 17 per cent of doctors in Scotland had taken up temporary commissions in the Royal Army Medical Corps by February 1915." Dunbarton - Casualties
سرهنگ خلبان اسماعیل صحتی : شکارچی ِ ميگ MiG-21 با کبرا! some other claimes that i dont know they are real or just some big exagrations. 1- The world's longest air hunter by Tomcat of Iran, by Phoenix missile, by Amir Aslani's pilot: targeting the Iraqi Mirage from a distance of 150 kilometers. 2- The world's most amazing airshow with the overthrow of four Iraqi MiG-23s on a flight and by a Tomcat and only one Phoenix missile that Iraq has approved 3 of them. 3- رکوردهای جاودان تامکتهای ایرانی + عکس - Gerdab.IR | گرداب
“When these inventions of the devil work, then what they achieve is more than amazing; when they do not work, then they achieve less than nothing.” After the German army’s 1912 exercises, Erich von Falkenhayn, soon to be Prussian minister of war, reflected upon a range of technological innovations, of which aircraft were among the foremost....
A regular hospital train service was established to bring wounded from the Channel ports North and the take recovered soldiers South. Extra services were scheduled in anticipation of offensives but this had to be kept very hush hush for fear of alerting the enemy to the forth coming attacks.
If you go to the interactive map on the following link, quite a lot of the stations which were used as medical reception centres are listed (orange squares)- Home Front Legacy 1914-18 edit; ok, it's playing up. If you go the menu and select reception centres, you'll get them.
If one looks at Pratt, Edwin A, British Railways and the Great War Vol I, Selwyn and Blount Ltd London 1921 this tome contains considerable detail of the role of the railways in transporting wounded in Britain including details of traffic to and from Scotland
Ta, need to get that one. Got Britain's Railways at War 1939-45 by Nock, but nothing on the Great War.