Maud Butler was a 16-year-old girl living in NSW’s Blue Mountains when World War I broke out.
The teenaged waitress didn’t want to stay at home while the young men around her went to the front line– so she took radical action.
“I had a terrible desire to help in some way, but I was only a girl,” Maud later told reporters. “I decided to do something for myself.”
Maud’s crafty plan was so remarkable, it’s now being researched by historian Professor Victoria Haskins, who has received a grant to research women and war.
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Maud Butler (married name was Hulme (divorced in the 1930s) then married again as Rutherford (1940s) went to night school to get her required high school qualification in mathematics so she could study to become a midwife. She then studied in the early 1930s at midwifery training for a year at South Sydney Hospital and became a registered nurse. She worked in maternity wards in hospitals and then ran her own small private hospital in South Parade Campsie for mothers and babies. She lived for many years in Oswald St Campsie and then in Hill St Campsie. She was a very capable, opinionated, focussed and independent woman and greatly respected in the Canterbury-Bankstown area. She mothered three children Thomas (Rocky), Cliff and Paula who have now all sadly passed away. All greatly missed.
This was not an incident Maud Butler related to her children and grand children. After this episode, Maud settled down and moved past the derision that inevitabley followed such an action. Maud lived for many years in Campsie, Sydney where she ran a private hospital until retiring. She died in 1987 aged 88 and was buried at the Rookwood cemetery.