Fernanda Jacobsen
Fernanda Jacobsen was commandant of the Scottish Ambulance Unit which provided humanitarian assistance in three convoys during the Spanish Civil War. She was appointed an Officer in the Order of the British Empire for her work in Spain, which continued through the end of the war after the rest of the unit had returned home.
Spanish Civil War
First Scottish Ambulance Unit
The Spanish Civil War broke out in July 1936 and Glasgow businessman Sir Daniel Macaulay Stevenson funded the creation of the Scottish Ambulance Unit to provide humanitarian help. Fernanda Jacobsen led the first unit of six ambulances and a lorry, with a crew of 19, which set out from Glasgow on 17 September 1936. Over the course of the war there were three such convoys, all led by Jacobsen.In 1936 the ambulances helped transport the wounded during the retreat from Olias del Rey towards Illescas, Toledo. For their work on the front in Toledo, the SAU was nicknamed Los Brujos, but the unit lost seven crew, all returned to Scotland. Five of the seven were deported by British authorities, accused of looting, including stealing from dead soldiers. The convoy returned home in December 1936 and was praised by Anthony Eden. Jacobsen estimated that the SAU had treated 2,500 wounded and transported 1,000 evacuees.
Second and third convoys
In November 1936, Jacobsen had been able to persuade the Labour movement to provide some funding, over the objections of some in the Scottish Labour Party. In January 1937 a second convoy, again led by Jacobsen, travelled to Spain. The second SAU expedition focused its efforts on the capital, which was suffering from the bombardment of the Siege of Madrid. Their work was enthusiastically praised in Politica, a newspaper in Madrid. After months of working to evacuate the wounded and provide relief, under pressure from bombings, the second convoy returned in July, to be replaced by a third convoy in September.In January 1938, Jacobsen complained that three volunteers who had been sent to join the second convoy were more concerned with promoting Communism and had even decorated one of the ambulances with a picture of Vladimir Lenin. The three had left the SAU to join the Spanish Medical Aid Committee and thereafter returned to Glasgow where they were making allegations about the SAU, causing donations to drop off. Jacobsen wanted to speak to Major-General Sir Walter Maxwell-Scott, founder of Scottish Friends of National Spain, to address the issue. Four members in all had left to join the Spanish Medical Aid Committee in March 1937 in opposition to Jacobsen's view that the SAU should remain in Madrid if it were to become surrounded—something Stevenson had instructed against—and complaining that she was not co-operating enough with government authorities.
At that time, the critical problem in Madrid was a lack of food. The possibility of evacuating Madrid was being considered, but Jacobsen was not sure if that would be possible. Conditions in Madrid continued to be very serious and in August 1938, after the other members of the third convoy had returned to Scotland in July, Jacobsen, who had remained behind, appealed for contributions in The Guardian, saying of the people there that "Weakened as they are by malnutrition, not to say starvation, without fuel, without the necessaries of life, the coming of winter is to many of them a sentence of death." The appeal was successful and Jacobsen was able to open two porridge canteens in January 1939 to provide food to the starving of Madrid. Jacobsen and her ambulance unit were visited by Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., whose father was then ambassador of the United States to the UK, in February.
She continued to run the two canteens throughout the war but after the victory of Francisco Franco in April 1939 one of these was taken by the Falangist relief organisation Auxilio Social, to her fury. Her work continued beyond the end of the war, and she returned to Scotland in August 1939.