Portsmouth News

Veteran set for battlefiel­d visit

- Sophie Lewis sophie.lewis@jpress.co.uk

THE veteran support charity, Waterloo Uncovered, is taking a team of veterans and archaeolog­ists to the Waterloo Battlefiel­d in Belgium next month for the first excavation since 2019.

Lisa Randall, 55, who served 11 years in the Royal Navy as a Surgeon Lieutenant Commander, is going to be a part of the excavation team, leaving for Belgium on Saturday for a fortnight.

Lisa works in central Portsmouth as a GP for military patients and began her archaeolog­ical journey when she became part of Battlefiel­ds Uncovered, an online project, last year.

She said: ‘I think this is going to be a chance of a lifetime.

‘I have always been interested and I was hoping to go on an excavation but with Covid that was not possible.’

In 2019, the charity unearthed three amputated legs at the Mont-Saint-Jean farm in Belgium, which was the allied field hospital during the battle.

The discovery of human remains is an incredibly rare find in a Napoleonic battlefiel­d and they were sent to Brussels for analysis.

It is believed that up to 500 limbs were amputated by surgeons at the farm during the battle, meaning the project in 2019 may have only uncovered the tip of the iceberg and that the July team could unearth more.

For the first time in the charity’s seven-year history, it has been given permission to commence excavation in the village of Plancenoit, which will shed light on the Prussian impact on the battle.

Professor Tony Pollard, one of the project’s archaeolog­ical directors, said: ‘The team are particular­ly excited to shed light on the often-forgotten Prussian contributi­on through their discoverie­s.

‘We hope we will be able to provideamo­reaccurate,vivid picture of what happened at this vitally important site on the battlefiel­d.’

The charity is also going to conduct the first ever largescale geophysica­l survey of the battlefiel­d and the veterans will play an integral role in the archaeolog­ical excavation process.

Lisa said: ‘There is something very special about the mutual understand­ing and camaraderi­e that the veterans have through shared experience­s and using this to help each other.

‘I love the idea that archaeolog­y is being used as rehabilita­tion.’

 ?? ?? Lisa Randall, Surgeon Lieutenant on HMS Endurance, helping out at a children’s hospital in Uruguay in 1994
Lisa Randall, Surgeon Lieutenant on HMS Endurance, helping out at a children’s hospital in Uruguay in 1994

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom