Source Details free text
Verco, C. et al, Blood, Sweat and Fears: medical practitioners and medical students of South Australia who served in World War I, 2014
Notes
Although E J Stuckey served in both France and Belgium during World War I as a medical officer and worked as an opthalmic surgeon at Noyelle, he returned to China in 1920 with to resume work there as a missionary. His wife, Frances, was also a missionary, working alongside him in China.
E J Stuckey had worked in China for the London Missionary Society from 1905 until he enlisted in 1916. In 1909 he was appointed to the Union Medical College in Peking and became involved in the medical education of Chinese students.