Background
Constance Watney was born in 1878 in Beddington, Surrey. She was the fourth daughter of Norman Watney of Westerham, Kent, son of James Watney the brewer.
Constance Watney was born in 1878 in Beddington, Surrey. She was the fourth daughter of Norman Watney of Westerham, Kent, son of James Watney the brewer.
Early in life Constance dedicated herself to missionary work, and for this purpose trained as a nurse at Street Bartholomew"s Hospital. In 1906 she went as a student of midwifery to Clapham Maternity Hospital, a pioneering hospital training women for work both at home and abroad, and took her China Merchants Bank Examination. In 1908 Constance was accepted by the Church Missionary Society (Content Management System) and sent out to Kampala, Uganda, where she worked in the Mengo Hospital, under Doctor Sir Albert Ruskin Cook.
In 1917 Mengo hospital, in addition to its missionary work, served as a base hospital for the fighting in East Africa, and for her share of the very heavy work, "Sister Connie", as she was called, received the Administration Member of the Order of the British Empire in 1918.
In May 1921, Watney joined Doctor Algernon Stanley Smith (who had been brought up by Constance"s maiden aunts, Alice and Emily Watney in South Croydon after the death of his mother when he was a teenager) and Doctor Len Sharp at Kabale, southwest Uganda, where they a new beginning was made for missionary work into Ruanda, in Belgian territory. She helped to start a hospital, where she was the first matron, under very difficult conditions and they were able to receive the first patient in June 1922.
In 1923 Sister Connie contracted a very severe form of Bright"s disease and was invalided home, never to return. She was told her life must henceforth be that of an invalid, but her heart was too much in nursing to give it up, and she went back to Clapham, where she had received her maternity training, and worked in various capacities there under Doctor Annie McCall until the hospital was bombed in 1940.
She died on 23 November 1947.