List of Ambulance Drivers During World War I - Writers

Writers

  • Louis Bromfield - volunteer American Field Service
  • William Slater Brown - volunteer Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps
  • Malcolm Cowley - volunteer American Field Service
  • Harry Crosby - volunteer American Field Service
  • E. E. Cummings - volunteer Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps
  • Kati Dadeshkeliani - Russian Army ambulance driver
  • Russell Davenport - U.S. Army Medical Corps
  • John Dos Passos - volunteer Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps
  • Helen Gleason - volunteer Munro Ambulance Corps
  • Julien Green- volunteer American Field Service
  • Ernest Hemingway - volunteer American Field Service
  • Robert Hillyer - volunteer Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps
  • Sidney Howard - volunteer American Field Service
  • Jerome K. Jerome - French Army ambulance driver
  • John Howard Lawson - volunteer Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps
  • Desmond MacCarthy
  • Archibald MacLeish - U.S. Army ambulance driver, who later became an artillery captain
  • John Masefield
  • F. Van Wyck Mason - ambulance corps volunteer, who later joined the French Army and then the U.S. Army
  • Somerset Maugham - volunteer British Red Cross ambulance corps
  • Charles Nordhoff - volunteer American Field Service
  • William Seabrook - American Field Service
  • Robert W. Service - British Red Cross volunteer
  • Olaf Stapledon - Friends' Ambulance Unit volunteer
  • Sir Hugh Walpole - Red Cross involunteer Russia
  • Amos Niven Wilder - American Field Service volunteer, who later joined an artillery unit /

Read more about this topic:  List Of Ambulance Drivers During World War I

Famous quotes containing the word writers:

    There is something else which has the power to awaken us to the truth. It is the works of writers of genius.... They give us, in the guise of fiction, something equivalent to the actual density of the real, that density which life offers us every day but which we are unable to grasp because we are amusing ourselves with lies.
    Simone Weil (1909–1943)

    Most writers steal a good thing when they can,
    And when ‘tis safely got ‘tis worth the winning.
    The worst of ‘t is we now and then detect ‘em,
    Before they ever dream that we suspect ‘em.
    Bryan Waller Proctor (1787–1874)

    How few writers can prostitute all their powers!
    —E.M. (Edward Morgan)