George Maling was born in Sunderland on 6th October, 1888 at Carlton House the son
of Edwin Allan and Maria Jane Maling. He was educated at Uppingham, going on to Oxford
and then to St Thomas's Hospital where he obtained the Degrees, M A; M B; B Ch. Oxon;
MRCS; and LRCP. The Battle of Loos formed a part of the wider Artois-
Advancing
towards the astonished Germans that afternoon without covering fire, the "Tommies"
were cut down by repeated machine gun fire. After several days of sporadic fighting,
the British were eventually forced to order a retreat. During the battle the British
forces suffered 50,000 casualties. German casualties were estimated much lower, at
approximately half the British total. It was against this backdrop of carnage that
Lieutenant George Maling of the Royal Army Medical Corps attached to 12th Battalion
of the Rifle Brigade (now the Royal Green Jackets) won his Victoria Cross.
At dawn
on the second day of battle a group of British soldiers were trapped in the area
of a ruined house in "no man's land", near Fauquissart, by a murderous artillery
barrage, with the screams of the wounded carrying to the British lines, where their
comrades were unable to give them support because of the intensity of the shelling.
Despite
this, and on being advised that were some three-
Accompanied by his orderly,
Maling moved from casualty to casualty, never hurrying, dressing wounds, carrying
less seriously wounded men to more comfortable positions, and giving solace and as
much palliative care as circumstances would permit to the more serious injured.
Both men worked through the day, taking cover only when the bombardment became too
intense, and even then Maling sought to protect his patients with his body. Eventually,
and inevitably, a shell exploded almost over-
George Allen Maling VC by Arthur Lockyear
