Florence Farmborough, a nurse in the Russian army, documented her experiences with the Russian Red Cross in Galicia, a border region between Ukraine and Poland, through photographs. Farmborough photographed the tragic consequences of war, including corpses lying on the battlefield. She photographed the rarely seen battlefields of the Eastern Front before fleeing the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. British news organizations avoided explicit images of the First and Second World Wars.
When World War I broke out in 1914, Florence Farmborough, who had become a Red Cross nurse, enlisted in the Imperial Russian Army. She served on the Galician and Romanian fronts. While she was a nurse, Farmborough kept a diary and carried a plate camera with her. While camping with the army, she developed the plates and printed the photographs. [
Farmborough witnessed an explosion on the Eastern Front of World War I on May 28th 1916. More than a dozen Russian soldiers were killed in the blast, and others crawled out of their trenches but soon collapsed and died. Only two Russian soldiers were standing and were taken away. The clothes of the two naked red figures who had walked over were burnt. A large barn was converted into a changing room. The two men stood side by side there. They were immediately ordered to be injected. As the skin's blood vessels could not be found, the needle was directly inserted into the flesh. The two men were laid down on the straw in the adjacent hut. In one to two hours, the cotton wool was completely saturated. In order to relieve the suffering of the two soldiers, the morphine injections were repeated many times. Both men died by morning. Neither of them spoke a word.
Farmborough accompanied the Russian army into Poland on July 31st 1916. Passing through many battlefields, the dead lay in strange and unnatural positions, crouching, doubled up, stretched out, prone, lying down, Austrian and Russian soldiers lying side by side, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural positions, lying down in strange and unnatural On the blackened earth, the mangled and crushed bodies of the dead lay. An Austrian soldier with a missing leg and a blackened and swollen face, a Russian soldier with a smashed face and a hideous appearance, a Russian soldier leaning against the barbed wire with his legs doubled up, flies crawling over the multiple open wounds, and other moving threads. These young, strong, energetic men had lost their vitality and lay motionless. How fragile and fleeting human life is. When a bullet pierces living flesh, life ends.