# Mr. Gilbert’s World Tour: Rethinking Disabled Veterans Across British Imperial Spaces

**Authors:** Michael Robinson

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad084 · 2024-03-21

## TL;DR

The paper explores how disabled WWI veterans were treated in Britain, Australia, and South Africa, revealing how disability shaped nation-building and challenged national narratives.

## Contribution

It introduces a transnational and intra-national approach using Imperial Pensioners to complicate understandings of disability and veteran care.

## Key findings

- Disability was intertwined with nation-building in British imperial spaces.
- Disability diagnoses can contradict broader national assessments of veteran care.
- Imperial Pensioners reveal diverse responses to disability across colonies.

## Abstract

This article provides a comparative analysis of the treatment of disabled First World War veterans in 1920s Britain and the simultaneous care of Imperial Pensioners residing in Australia and South Africa via the detailed administrative reports of a British civil servant, G.F. Gilbert. Imperial Pensioners were disabled veteran migrants of the British Army residing overseas. A study of these veteran populations in Australia and South Africa provides two primary insights into the broader historiography of disabled veterans. Firstly, a comparative case study helps to show the way in which cultural notions of disability were part of broader ideas of nation-building overseas. Secondly, the specific disability diagnosis category chosen as a more in-depth case study can further complicate and contradict broader assessments of national responses. This article attempts to build upon recent transnational histories of veterans by transcending national boundaries and homogenous veteran profiles with an extension in methodological scope by providing an intra-national case study via the Imperial Pensioner.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Disabled (MESH:D009069)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12300749