“Faces of Battle” Really Puts Some Disfigured Face To War-time Atrocities
Filed under: Strange Things to See
The “Faces of Battle” exhibition, opening to the public on Nov. 10 at the National Army Museum in Chelsea, UK, features unseen photos of Britain’s war wounded. And because the absolute shock has sapped our will to be a bit more creative, so we’re just dutifully pasting these fine text blocks from the press release.
Faces of Battle charts the stories of the men whose faces were blown away in battle in the First World War, and the pioneering medics who fought to enable them to face life again. The conflict saw injuries inflicted on a scale and intensity unseen before. Trenches dug to protect the bodies of soldiers from powerful new weapons could not protect their heads - exposed to sniper fire over the parapets, or to the shrapnel and artillery hailing down on them from across No Mans Land.
Surgeon Harold Gillies, posted to France in 1915, quickly realised that the number and severity of facial casualties would be vast, and successfully argued for the establishment of a special ward - ultimately, a specialist hospital - for the treatment of the facially wounded. At the start of the Battle of the Somme, he prepared his team for 200 casualties. Two thousand arrived.
Gillies’ work was revolutionary, and yet is little remembered. Most field surgeons, faced with blasted faces, simply stitched together the edges of wounds to stop infection. As wounds healed and scar tissue contracted, the skin of men’s faces would become twisted and not only disfiguring, but disabling. Men returned from the horrors of the front terrified to face their loved ones. Gillies’ technique used bones and cartilage to reconstruct faces, and pioneered the extraordinary ‘tubed pedical’ method of skin grafting, in the days before skin grafts were possible. Multiple surgeries were required and the patients were kept in hospital for years at a time.
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